Democrats Attempt to Amend Small Business Act

News

Democrats Attempt to Amend Small Business Act

Revision would redefine small business…

By Abby Prince
Smallbusinessnewz.com
April 24, 2008

If Democrats succeed in their quest to amend the Small Business Act, it could have a devastating affect on small businesses. New York Representative Nydia Velazquez is leading Democrats in a push to pass H.R. 5819, the Small Business Innovation Research and Small Business Technology Transfer Reauthorization Act.

The bill would effectively change the current definition of a small business from "independently owned" to include businesses owned up to 49.9% by venture capital firms.

GenomeWeb Daily News reports:

"This draft of the bill would reauthorize the programs through 2010 and would give Congress time to examine how the programs are working. The bill also would increase funding levels, raising Phase I awards from $100,000 to $300,000 and Phase II awards from $750,000 to $2.2 million, to reflect the rising costs of high-tech research."

This is the second time in the past year that Velazquez and the Small Business House Committee have tried to pass legislation that would allow wealthy investors to profit from government funds.

Many small businesses may not be able to survive if this bill becomes a law.

The bill is expected to be fast tracked by House leaders in an effort to avoid criticism from small business advocates and media attention.

Find out more on this bill including what you can do to protect your small business, in the SmallBusinessNewz video.


Source: http://www.smallbusinessnewz.com/topnews/2008/04/18/democrats-attempt-to-amend-small-business-act


House redefines small business

News

House redefines small business

By Nancy Marshall Genzer
Marketplace
April 24, 2008

A House bill, passed late last night, now allows venture capitalists to invest in up to 49.1 percent of a small business. Nancy Marshall Genzer looks into how the change affects competition for government contracts.

Please click here to listen

TEXT OF STORY

Late last night, the House approved a bill that will change the definition of small business and allow venture capitalists to buy up to 49.1 percent of one. The legislation still needs to pass the Senate. Marketplace's Nancy Marshall Genzer reports.


Nancy Marshall Genzer: The definition of a small business is important because the federal government is required to award a portion of all contracts to mom-and-pop firms. American Small Business League President Lloyd Chapman says, under the new definition, small businesses without deep-pocketed friends would be at a big disadvantage.

Lloyd Chapman: In order to get federal small business contracts, they'd have to compete with firms that were controlled by some of the wealthiest venture capital firms in the country. You can imagine how that would turn out.

But some entrepreneurs have told the House Committee on Small Business they need venture capital to grow. Speaking at a recent hearing, the committee's chairwoman, Nydia Velazquez, said small businesses wouldn't be controlled by their investors.

Nydia Velazquez: Limitations are placed on the venture capital companies, including its size and its control by larger corporations.

Chapman says Velazquez favors the legislation because she took campaign contributions from venture capitalists. Velazquez's office says she wasn't motivated by the money.

In Washington, I'm Nancy Marshall Genzer for Marketplace.

 

Source: http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2008/04/24/small_business

Velázquez Champions VC Firms at Small Business Expense

News

Velázquez Champions VC Firms at Small Business Expense

By Keith Girard
Allbusiness.com
April 24, 2008

Small businesses suffered a stinging defeat in Congress this week delivered by the one lawmaker who is supposed to be looking out for their interests, House Small Business Committee Chairman Nydia M. Velázquez, D – NY.

Velázquez has been quarterbacking the venture capital industry’s efforts to reverse a Small Business Administration policy that prohibits firm substantially owned by venture capital companies from participating in two key conduits for government research grants, the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program and the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) program.

For the past two years, she has been the bill’s principal sponsor, and in each case, she’s rammed it through the House at lightning speed with little regard for small business concerns. By the time the dust had settled this time, the House of Representatives had overwhelmingly approved the bill (368-43). The measure all but eliminates “small business” from the programs, according to the National Small Business Association (NSBA).

The NSBA is one of several small business groups that have been pitted against the Biotech Industry Organization (BIO), the National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) and other groups in the five-year battle over the SBA policy. Indeed, the stakes are high. More than $10 billion has been funneled through the two programs since their inception in 1982.

The whole intent of the programs is to make sure small, independent R&D firms have a shot at government grants. In keeping with the landmark 1958 Small Business Act, which created the SBA, the SBIR and STTR are only supposed to be open to “independently owned” firms with fewer than 500 employees.

The programs operated with relatively little controversy until the SBA revised its eligibility policy in 2003. It began excluding firms from competing for grants if they were substantially owned by venture capital companies. As part of the policy shift, the SBA started counting VC company employees and the employees of the firms they controlled toward the 500-employee threshold. The fight was on.

While Republicans controlled Congress, the biotech and VC industry made little headway. But after Democrats took over in 2006, the playing field began to tilt. Small businesses suddenly proved to be no match against a team stacked with heavyweights like Abbott Laboratories, Pfizer, Merck, Monsanto, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Amgen, Eli Lilly, Schering-Plough, GlaxoSmithKline and other multi-national pharmaceutical companies. All of course, are major campaign contributors.

The most recent effort is a case study of how Velázquez has thrown the game to big pharma, through the BIO. Out of three hearings on the bill since January, ten of the 16 witnesses had ties to biotech and/or venture capital interests, two had general biotech backgrounds and the rest were government officials. No one spoke on behalf of small businesses, according to Rick Shindell, who writes a newsletter on the SBIR program.

“Nobody was asked (or allowed) to give testimony in any of the three hearings contrary to the word of BIO and NVCA. In communication with House [small business committee] staffers, the subject of alternatives to VC was ‘off limits.’ Some small Maryland based biotech companies wanted to make their side known, but were rebuffed by the committee. They then tried to go through their Congressman [and House Majority Leader], Steny Hoyer, D-Md., but to no avail,” Shindell wrote.

The bill contains all of the provisions sought by biotech and venture capital interests, according to small business groups. Significantly, the bill prohibits the SBA from classifying any VC company as a “large business” as long as the company has fewer than 500 employees—no matter how many “small” businesses the VC firm controls. “This raises the specter of a competition for funding between actual small businesses and “small businesses” owned by a VC syndicate that controls 1,000 small companies, employees 100,000 people, and generates billions in revenue,” according to the NSBA.

Another provision would allow federal agencies to award an unlimited number of “jumbo grants” particularly tailored to large venture capital concerns. It raises grant ceilings to $300,000 from $100,000 for Phase One research projects and to $2.2 million from $750,000 for Phase Two projects without an increase in the overall set-aside for the program. “Using conservative estimates, more than half the companies currently in the SBIR program would be purged,” the NSBA says.

Yet another provision appears to shift control of the programs from the SBA's Office of Technology to a newly created interagency committee controlled by two other government agencies. That would take the programs out of the hands of the pesky SBA and put it under agencies that are more receptive to the venture capital industry.

After Velázquez introduced the bill (H.R. 5819), it was marked up by three committees and moved to the full House for a vote in one week. Of course, legislation never moves like that without the imprimatur of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi. The California Democrat happens to represent wealthy San Francisco suburbs that are home to dozens of high-tech moguls. It should also come as no surprise that Velázquez is the top recipient on her committee of campaign contributions from the NVCA this year. Thirteen other committee members have received campaign contributions as well, according to federal campaign finance records.

Venture capital and biotech concerns argue that the size restrictions imposed by the Small Business Act are antiquated and don’t reflect the reality of modern research. Because of the high costs of developing new drugs, venture capital funding is required almost as a matter of course. The industry raises the specter that many promising drugs will be abandoned or will go undeveloped without access to the programs.

As always, however, the issue is about far more than altruism. VC firms want the money because they have stopped funding almost all early Phase One research. Instead they are focusing on later stage funding where the risks are lower and the potential return on investment is much higher. In essence, the industry wants the government to take all the risks, so they can step in later and take all the profits.

If that’s the way the VC game is played so be it. But the SBIR and the STTR are “small business” programs. These bills are nothing more than an effort to hijack them. If Congress wants to funnel more grant money to VC firms it should set up separate programs to do so. But that would require more money, and lawmakers would be forced to explain why deep-pocketed VC firms deserve government handouts.





Source: http://www.allbusiness.com/company-activities-management/business-climate-conditions/9077284-1.html

Small Business Administration Stalls Release of PR Executives E-mails

Press Release

Small Business Administration Stalls Release of PR Executives E-mails

SBA PR executive's e-mail shows evidence of an aggressive campaign to kill stories on contracting abuses.

April 22, 2008

Petaluma, Calif. - The Small Business Administration (SBA) is delaying the release of SBA Press Office Director, Mike Stamler's inbound and outbound e-mails from 2006 and 2007. The American Small Business League (ASBL) requested the information under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). 

The ASBL requested Stamler's e-mails after it discovered that Stamler had sent a number of aggressive and threatening e-mails to journalists and publications which ran stories on ASBL's efforts.  Specifically, the ASBL's effort to expose the diversion of federal small business contracts to Fortune 1000 firms. The ASBL has also received information from journalists that Stamler has made a number of libelous statements about the ASBL and its President, Lloyd Chapman.

The ASBL believes the SBA's decision to stall the release of Stamler's e-mails is an attempt to allow SBA attorneys more time to review Stamler's communications and scrub them of any damaging information.  The ASBL believes that Stamler's emails will indicate that the SBA has made a significant effort to pressure journalists into dropping stories on the diversion of federal small business contracts to major corporations.

"Mike Stamler has been browbeating, threatening and bullying journalists to drop this story for years," President of the ASBL, Lloyd Chapman said. "Our goal is to simply uncover the facts and expose the SBA's campaign to discredit the ASBL and to mislead Congress, the public and the media on this issue. SBA Administrator Steven Preston is obviously stalling the release of Stamler's e-mails so they can remove all the damaging information."

"Mr. Stamler wants to impugn my credibility with the media, but he knows that I have won every federal lawsuit I have filed against the Department of Defense (DOD), NASA (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=223) and the SBA. He also knows that information I provided prompted the first General Accounting Office (GAO) investigation (http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d03704t.pdf ) and the first Congressional hearing into the diversion of government small business contracts to Fortune 1000 firms.  He knows I provided information to the SBA that resulted in the removal of 600 large businesses (http://www.washingtontechnology.com/print/17_22/20094-1.html) from the SBA's small business database. He also knows I worked with the SBA's Office of Inspector General and provided information that led to one firm being recommended for debarment and a second firm paying a $1 million fine for misrepresenting themselves as a small business," Chapman stated. (http://www.govexec.com/story_page.cfm?articleid=33735&ref=rellink

In one example, Stamler sent an e-mail to the Long Island Business Journal that was so aggressive and profane that it prompted LIBJ Staff Writer, Ambrose Clancy to write a piece on the paper's blog entitled, "Expletives the SBA's forte?" (http://libizblog.wordpress.com/2008/02/22/expletives-the-sbas-forte/)

In other cases, Stamler has threatened to remove publications that ran stories on the SBA's role in the diversion of federal small business contracts to large businesses from the SBA's media list.

Stamler has reportedly made hostile and aggressive calls to journalists, editors and publishers that were preparing to publish stories on the issue and tried to bully or pressure them into dropping the stories.

The ASBL is preparing to file suit against the SBA in the event that all of Stamler's 2006 and 2007 e-mails are not released promptly.

 

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Anti-Small Business Bill Backed By Venture Capitalist Lobby Moves Through House In Record Time

Press Release

Anti-Small Business Bill Backed By Venture Capitalist Lobby Moves Through House In Record Time

National Venture Capital Association pushes bill to give government small business dollars to wealthy investors.

April 22, 2008

Petaluma, Calif. - A bill that would give some of the nation's wealthiest investors billions of dollars in federal small business contracts is set to move through the House of Representatives in record time. Last week, Nydia M. Velázquez (D - NY) the Chair of the House Committee on Small Business, introduced H.R. 5819, the SBIR/STTR Reauthorization Act.

The bill went into mark-up and passed through the House Committee on Small Business on Thursday, April 17th.  According to the Weekly Leader, H.R. 5819 could be debated on the floor of the House as early as Wednesday of this week.  This is the second time in less than a year that Rep. Velázquez has proposed legislation that could devastate federal programs designed to assist small businesses.

Since becoming the Chair of the House Committee on Small Business, Velázquez has established a record of talking about preventing the diversion of federal small business contracts to large corporations, but not acting on it. During her tenure she has failed to introduce legislation to address the problem.  Last week, Velázquez shocked and disappointed small business owners across the country when she began pushing legislation that would allow some of the nation's wealthiest venture capital firms to compete for federal small business contracts.

"The American Small Business League and its members worked for months to help the democrats take over Congress. At the time we thought democrats were going to bring positive change for small businesses," President of the American Small Business League, Lloyd Chapman said.  "Our members and small businesses around the country are just stunned that Congresswoman Velázquez and her committee would pass legislation that will be so detrimental to small businesses. No matter what she says, the bottom line is that this bill is going to allow billionaires to take contracts away from legitimate small businesses in every state.  We are going to do everything we can to let the Speaker of the House Pelosi know that Velázquez is no friend to small business.  I want to see someone chairing the House Small Business Committee who is more concerned about promoting the interests of small businesses than in helping billionaire venture capitalists masquerade as small businesses."

In September of 2007, the House passed H.R. 3567, which contains a similar provision to H.R. 5819.  However, the bill failed to pass through the Senate when it received opposition from the ASBL, U.S. Small Business Administration, the White House, National Small Business Association and the U.S Chamber of Commerce.

The ASBL (www.asbl.com) encourages concerned citizens and small business owners to contact their congressional representatives and ask them to oppose changing the definition of a small business in the Small Business Act. Small businesses should remain "independently owned" and operated.

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