Contact Information: Contact: Christopher Gunn Communications Director American Small Business League (707) 789-9575
Venture Capital Firms to Get Government Small Business Contracts Under H.R. 3567
Small Business to Lose Billions in Federal Contracts to Venture Capital Firms Under New Bill
| Source: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA--(Marketwire - September 25, 2007) - The following is a statement by the American
Small Business League:
This week Congress will consider a bill that will allow many of the
nation's largest venture capital firms and banks to be considered small
businesses. Under the bill, titled H.R. 3567 the "Small Business Investment
Expansion Act of 2007," venture capital firms will be given an exemption in
federal small business size determination. If the bill becomes law, multi
billion dollar venture capital firms and other qualifying financial
institutions will be allowed to acquire a small business and retain that
firm's small business status indefinitely for the purposes of receiving
federal small business contracts.
H.R. 3567 was introduced less than 90 days after the Small Business
Administration adopted a policy to close a similar loophole that allowed
billions in federal contracts to Fortune 1000 firms to be reported by the
federal government as small business contracts. Prior to June 30th, federal
policy allowed a large business to acquire a small business and retain that
firm's small business status for up to 20 years. The new SBA policy reduces
the re-certification period to five years.
The SBA Office of Inspector General, the Office of Federal Procurement
Policy and the Senate Small Business Committee all endorsed a policy that
would have only allowed large businesses to keep the small business status
of an acquired firm for one year. The Small Business Investment Expansion
Act of 2007 will allow venture capital firms to acquire a small business
and keep that firm's small business status until that business breaches the
small business size threshold for their industry.
Since 2003, a series of federal investigations and private studies found
the Bush Administration had included contracts to firms such as Lockheed,
Boeing, Raytheon, Bechtel, General Dynamics, L3 Communications and Northrop
Grumman towards the federal government's 23 percent small business
contracting goal.
Critics of the new bill see it as another big business promoted loophole
that will divert even more federal small business contracts to large
businesses. In August, SBA Administrator Steven Preston announced that
$77.7 billion in federal contracts went to small business during FY 06, but
acknowledged that "old regs" had allowed firms like Lockheed Martin to be
considered small businesses.
In 2005, the Small Business Administration proposed a similar policy and
put it out for public comment. The policy received the largest response to
any proposed new policy in SBA history with over 6000 respondents. The SBA
generally receives less than 100 responses to similar policy changes.
Additionally, 95 percent of the responses were against any exemption for
venture capital firms in small business size determination. The SBA dropped
the proposed policy. Opponents to the exemption of venture capital firms
included local Chambers of Commerce, small business groups, trade
associations and individuals from across the country.
"It is very disappointing that this Congress would even consider another
loophole like H.R. 3567, which will divert even more federal small business
contracts big business," American Small Business League founder Lloyd
Chapman said.