Contact Information: Contact: Christopher Gunn Communications Director American Small Business League (707) 789-9575
Bush to Take Last Crack at Dismantling Programs for Middle Class Firms
| Source: American Small Business League
PETALUMA, CA--(Marketwire - July 24, 2008) - The following is a statement from the American
Small Business League:
The Bush Administration is gearing up to take one last shot at dismantling
federal programs designed to assist middle class firms. Earlier this year,
the Small Business Administration (SBA) announced that they intend to
review size standards for every industry classification within federal
contracting programs. SBA critics contend that the announcement is an
indication that the SBA is positioning itself to increase federal small
business size standards to allow much larger firms to participate in
federal contracting programs designed for small businesses.
Since President Bush took office, his administration has cut the SBA's
budget and staffing by more than 50 percent. In addition to harsh budget
cuts within the SBA, the Bush Administration has refused to implement the
federal law establishing a 5 percent set-aside program for women, closed
the SBA office to assist
veteran-owned firms, and dramatically cut staffing at the SBA for programs
designed to assist
minority-owned firms.
In 2004, the SBA took public comment on a proposal to reduce the federal
definition of a small business from 500 employees to 100 employees or less.
The proposal received the highest response in SBA history, with 95 percent
of respondents in favor of dramatically reducing federal small business
size standards. (http://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=89)
Regarding the SBA's proposed audit of all federal small business size
standards, the ASBL predicts that Bush officials will completely ignore the
public comment, as they have in the past, and propose polices to
dramatically increase small business size standards. On July 17th, 2008,
the Associated Press (AP) reported that between 2004 and 2007, $1 in every
$3 spent by the Federal Government with small businesses went to firms
within 50 miles of the White House. Based on a series of federal
investigations into the actual recipients of federal small business
contracts, a significant portion of the firms coded as small businesses
during those years were actually Fortune 1000 corporations or divisions of
Fortune 1000 corporations.
The ASBL is concerned that the Bush Administration may attempt to close the
SBA completely and end all federal programs designed to assist small
businesses by combining it with the United States Department of Commerce.
"George Bush has been the most anti-small business president in my lifetime
and we are watching him very carefully. We anticipate that the Bush
Administration will make one more attempt to dismantle federal programs
designed to help America's 26 million small businesses," President of the
ASBL Lloyd Chapman said. "The Bush Administration has a documentable track
record of diverting hundreds of billions of dollars in federal small
business contracts to some of the largest companies in the world and we are
watching them very closely."