Posted on Thu, Sep. 08, 2005
AP: 9/11 recovery loans loosely managed
Associated Press
The government's $5 billion effort to help small businesses recover from the Sept. 11 attacks was so loosely managed that it gave low-interest loans to companies that didn't need terrorism relief - or even know they were getting it, The Associated Press has found.
And while some at New York's Ground Zero couldn't get assistance they desperately sought, companies far removed from the devastation - a South Dakota country radio station, a Virgin Islands perfume shop, a Utah dog boutique and more than 100 Dunkin' Donuts and Subway sandwich shops - had no problem winning the government-guaranteed loans.
Dentists and chiropractors in numerous cities, as well as an Oregon winery that sold trendy pinot noir to New York City restaurants also got assistance.
"That's scary. Nine-11 had nothing to do with this," said James Munsey, a Virginia entrepreneur who described himself as "beyond shocked" to learn his nearly $1 million loan to buy a special events company in Richmond was drawn from the Sept. 11 program. <snip>
http://www.tallahassee.com/mld/tallahassee/business/12591910.htmPosted on Sat, Sep. 10, 2005
Congress to investigate 9/11 loan abuses
FRANK BASS and DIRK LAMMERS
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - Congress will investigate the "flagrant abuse" of a federal loan program designed to help businesses recover from the Sept. 11 attacks and make sure such problems don't occur with Hurricane Katrina relief, a key Senate Republican announced Friday.
Sen. Olympia Snowe, R-Maine, chairwoman of the Senate Small Business and Entrepreneurship Committee, announced the investigation in response to an Associated Press story Thursday that showed the federal program was so loosely managed that it gave low-interest loans to companies that didn't need terrorism relief or even know they were getting it.
"The apparent widespread abuse of loans provided through the Supplemental Terrorist Activity Relief Act is nothing short of an outrage," Snowe said.
The committee chairwoman said she would demand answers from both the banks that gave the loans and the Small Business Administration, which supervised the program. <snip>
http://www.ledger-enquirer.com/mld/ledgerenquirer/news/politics/12605530.htmLocal reps calling for fund probe
By Paul Brooks
Times Herald-Record
pbrooks@th-record.com
<snip> "At a time when many New York small businesses are indeed still recovering from the disruptions caused by the attacks of Sept. 11th, these reports of abuse of the STAR program and the profligate use of scarce government resources are indeed inexcusable," Clinton said in her letter.
The senior U.S. senator from New York, Chuck Schumer, also weighed in: "The ongoing congressional investigation into possible abuse of 9/11 loans should include any questionable transactions in Orange County and the entire Hudson Valley to make sure that only companies that needed economic assistance due to the terrorist attacks of 9/11 got the low-interest loans," he said.
Republican Rep. Sue Kelly of Katonah said the news reports raised questions about the operation of the loan program. "Congress will be seeking the answers in the days ahead. There is no place for fraud or abuse in any federal program, especially one as vital and serious as this, to help affected small businesses recover economically after 9/11." <snip>
http://www.recordonline.com/archive/2005/09/13/911aid13.htmSeptember 15, 2005
SBA praises itself, dismisses AP findings as 'sensational'
Associated Press
WASHINGTON - The Small Business Administration is distributing an audit praising its post-Sept. 11 relief work, while omitting a second report by the same auditor that criticized a substantial part of SBA's $5 billion lending effort.
The agency faces a congressional inquiry after The Associated Press reported it had made numerous loans to small businesses that neither wanted nor knew they were getting money earmarked for economic victims of the terrorist attacks.
The AP reported that companies hundreds of miles from the devastation of ground zero - from a Utah motorcycle dealer to an Ohio Subway sandwich shop - had received SBA-backed loans without being aware they had been drawn from the relief programs. <snip>
http://www.billingsgazette.com/index.php?id=1&display=rednews/2005/09/15/build/nation/50-sba-praises.inc