Venture Capital Industry Pushes Legislation to Hijack Federal Small Business Programs

Press Release

Venture Capital Industry Pushes Legislation to Hijack Federal Small Business Programs

June 11, 2009

Petaluma, Calif. – The National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) has been showering Congress with millions of dollars in campaign contributions in hopes of changing the 55-year-old federal definition of a small business. The latest bill focuses on the Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) program. Wealthy investors are hoping to ultimately gain access to all federal small business programs.(http://maplight.org/map/us/interest/F2500/view/all, http://www.opensecrets.org/industries/indus.php?ind=F2500, http://www.opensecrets.org/pacs/lookup2.php?strID=C00150367&cycle=2008)  

Federal law currently defines a small business as a firm that is "independently owned." The NVCA is hoping to change that definition to include firms that are not only not "independently owned," but are owned and controlled by wealthy investors. If the NVCA is successful, millions of legitimate small businesses could be forced to close their doors.

For over two years, the NVCA has hired some of the most powerful lobbying firms in Washington in an effort to quietly pass legislation that will allow its members to dominate federal contracting programs for small businesses, and firms owned by women and minorities.

NVCA lobbying efforts have focused on President Barack Obama, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D - CA) and both the House and Senate Small Business Committees. In an April 2008 article in AllBusiness.com, House Small Business Committee Chair Nydia Velázquez (D - NY) was described as "quarterbacking" the legislation for the venture capital industry. (http://www.allbusiness.com/company-activities-management/business-climate-conditions/9077284-1.html)   

Congresswoman Velázquez has received significant contributions from the venture capital industry. Velázquez was able to pass two pro-venture capital bills through her committee in 2008, which were opposed by every major small business advocacy group in the country. (https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=624, http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/legislative/sap/110-1/hr3567sap-r.pdf)   

The latest bill to allow venture capitalists to participate in small business programs was introduced by Congressman Sam Graves (R - MO) on June 9. The bill, H.R. 2767, the "Investing in Tomorrow's Technology Act," amends Sec. 9 (e) of the Small Business Act and will allow a firm to be considered, "independently owned," if it is owned in majority part by one or more individuals or venture capital firms, and as long as no single venture capital firm owns 50 percent or more of the business.  As a result, H.R. 2767 will allow a business to be owned up to nearly 100 percent by a venture capital syndicate and maintain small business status.  (http://www.govtrack.us/congress/billtext.xpd?bill=h111-2767)   

The sudden appearance of H.R. 2767 is seen as a response to another bill, H.R 2568, the "Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act," which will strengthen the definition of "independently owned" to halt the diversion of federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms and firms controlled by venture capitalists.

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House Ready to Steam Roll Venture Capital Bill

News

House Ready to Steam Roll Venture Capital Bill

By Keith Girard
AllBusiness.com
June 11, 2009

It’s baaack! Rep. Sam Graves, R-Mo., introduced a bill this week in Congress that would make significant changes to two of the government’s most successful small business programs: the Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program and the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) program.

The most controversial provision would re-open these key government conduits of small business research grants to more venture capital firms. The Small Business Administration (SBA), which oversees the program, limited venture capital firm participation in 2003 because of its interpretation of what constitutes a "small business."

The turf war has been underway ever since. But this time around, the venture capital industry’s chances of winning are greater than ever. In fact, it’s almost a lock. It’s not so much that the arguments have changed, or the playing field. But, as a result of the November elections, the key players have. Now, venture capital interests clearly have the upper hand. 

This bill has long been a top priority for the powerful National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) and the equally influential Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO). The bill failed in previous sessions because small business groups and principally the Bush administration SBA opposed the VC provision.

Although Graves has sponsored the bill, House Small Business Committee Chairman Nydia M. Velazquez, D-N.Y., is once again quarterbacking the measure. She steamrolled it through her chamber last year -- it passed the House virtually without debate in a week -- and she is well on her way to doing it again.

The committee held a hearing on the bill last week (June 4); has scheduled a mark-up this week and will likely send it to the House floor in the next week or so. Once again, the hearing was only open to the venture capital community. Small business groups have tried to testify in the past, but have always been excluded. That alone sends up a red flag.

In any event, the Senate has been the major hurdle. The bill has died there repeatedly, largely because Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., who chaired the Senate small business committee, was wary of the VC provision. But Kerry has moved on. The committee is now chaired by Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., and she’s co-sponsoring the Senate version of the measure with the committee’s ranking member Olympia J. Snowe, R-Maine.

Another key obstacle, SBA Administrator Steven Preston, who strongly opposed the change, left with the Bush administration. His job has gone to Obama appointee Karen Mills, who is a former venture capitalist and has strong ties to the industry.

Finally there is the president. Obama sees himself as the technology and innovation president and is enamored with the venture capital industry. He’s apparently bought into high-minded arguments about the role venture capital plays in the development of new technologies and products.

And those arguments are true, to an extent. Google, Genentech, Intel, Cisco, Starbucks, Microsoft, and FedEx are all venture capital success stories. But what this debate is really about are profits and return on investment.

These days, the venture capital industry is having a rough time. In fact, a growing chorus within the industry is questioning whether the current investment model is obsolete, or even broken.

Over the last 10 years -- the typical life of a venture fund -- venture investments returned 17.3 percent, compared with 2.1 percent for the Nasdaq and 1.4 percent for the S.&P. 500, according to The New York Times. But the industry is no longer generating the heady returns of its boom years in the 1990s, when firms raked in up to 3 percent in fees and as much as 25 percent of the profits when companies went public. 

In the last five years, the return has fallen by half, to 8.6 percent, although still outperforming the Nasdaq’s 3.1 percent gain and the S&P 500’s 3.2 percent gain. Last year, however, the industry lost money. 

Venture investments returned minus 1.6 percent in the year ended Sept. 30, according to data cited by The New York Times from the NVCA and Thomson Reuters. The returns represented a 6.9 percentage-point drop from the one-year period that ended June 30, 2008, and a 28.2 percentage-point drop from the one-year period that ended Sept. 30, 2007, according to Thomson Reuters’ U.S. Private Equity Performance Index.

It’s not for lack of capital. The venture capital industry has been awash in money. In fact, insiders say too much money has been chasing too few deals, artificially inflating the valuations of companies and cutting returns. In addition, the industry feasted off the development of the telecommunications industry. But that sector is now mature, and no other similar easy bets have emerged.
 
In other words, it’s getting harder for the industry to match its go-go years. As a result, big investors are pulling out, the number of venture capital firms is dwindling, and the industry is going through what The Wall Street Journal calls a brutal shakeout.

One way to juice returns -- and save the model -- would be to shift the burden of high-risk, early stage investments to the government programs, and target venture investments for late-stage companies where the chances of success are far greater and the risks are far lower.

Indeed, Jack Biddle, a founding partner at Novak Biddle Venture Partners, who testified on behalf of the NVCA, acknowledged as much. "It is for these new projects that these businesses would apply for an SBIR grant, as we venture capitalists cannot and will not fund early stage research."

The SBIR and STTR programs are ready pots of money. They direct more than $2 billion in federal research and development funding annually to small-tech firms across the nation, according to Snowe. I reported on the success of the program in one of my columns last month. You can check it out here.

The real problem is that the VC provision represents a zero-sum game. In other words, grants that go to firms now prohibited under SBA guidelines won’t be available to truly small, independent firms that now qualify. For every winner, there will be a loser.

In fact, some question whether the industry was all that beneficial even during its heady days. In a controversial report, the Kauffman Foundation asserted that venture capital is not as essential to high-tech and life-science industry growth as is widely believed. Between 1997 and 2007, for example, only 16 percent of the Inc. 500 list of fastest growing companies had received venture backing.

Of course, the venture capital industry heatedly disputes that view.

The final element weighing in the bill’s favor is the sorry state of the economy. Proponents have dressed up the bill as a job creator. Maybe so -- for the flagging venture capital industry.

But if Congress is serious about creating jobs it will leave the SBIR and STTR programs alone. Instead, the real debate should be about whether the venture capital industry’s 20th century business model is capable of meeting the president’s 21st century goals for innovation and technological development.  

Source:  http://www.allbusiness.com/government/government-bodies-offices-us-federal-government/12358646-1.html 

Battle in Congress Over Billions in Small Business Contracts Heats-Up

Press Release

Battle in Congress Over Billions in Small Business Contracts Heats-Up

June 10, 2009

Petaluma, Calif. - The National Venture Capital Association (NVCA) and its wealthiest members have stepped-up their campaign to try and participate in federal small business contracting programs. Yesterday, a bill was introduced in the House of Representatives by Congressman Sam Graves (R - MO) that could allow firms that are owned by some of the nation's wealthiest investors to receive billions of dollars in federal small business contracts.

The bill, H.R. 2767, the "Investing in Tomorrow's Technology Act," would affect small businesses involved in the government's Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) program. The heart of the bill is a proposed change in the longstanding government definition of a small business, which currently requires that a small business be "independently owned." Congressman Graves' bill would modify the term "independently owned" to include firms that are actually not "independently owned," but owned and controlled by venture capitalists.  The bill circumvents the affiliation rules currently governing venture capital ownership of a small business.

Opponents of the bill say it will essentially repeal the Small Business Act by changing the federal definition of a small business to include firms that are actually not small businesses. The American Small Business League (ASBL) is opposing the bill. The ASBL estimates that changing the federal definition of a small business to include wealthy venture capitalists could divert billions of dollars in federal contracts away from middle class firms and could devastate legitimate small businesses around the country.

Although H.R. 2767 is focused on the SBIR program, the NVCA has blanketed both the House and Senate small business committees with contributions in an effort to have legislation passed that would allow them to participate in all federal small business contracting programs. In 2007, with the help of House Small Business Committee Chair Nydia Velázquez (D - NY), H.R. 3567 passed through the House of Representatives.  The bill would have allowed firms owned and controlled by some of the country's wealthiest investors to participate in all federal small business contracting programs.

Small business groups around the country became concerned about the future of federal small business contracting programs when President Obama appointed multi-millionaire venture capitalist Karen Mills, to head the Small Business Administration (SBA) and venture capitalist Winslow Sargeant to head the SBA Office of Advocacy. Both Mills and Sargeant were major contributors to President Obama's campaign. They have also been outspoken advocates of changes in federal policy and legislation that would allow venture capitalists and even some of the nation's largest venture capital firms to receive federal contracts designated for legitimate small businesses.

The ASBL is mounting a national campaign to oppose H.R. 2767 and any other legislation to amend the definition of a small business as "independently owned," to include wealthy venture capitalists.

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Small businesses to benefit from new legislation

News

Small businesses to benefit from new legislation

By Staff
Capital Solutions Bancorp
June 3, 2009

Not only have many small businesses watched their profits decline over the last year as consumers keep cash tucked firmly in their wallets, but many have also had trouble accessing business loans to help bridge the gap until economic recovery begins.

Small businesses unable to obtain necessary financing from traditional banks have more frequently turned to nontraditional lenders for short-term relief.

But in addition to battling these cash flow woes, one small business advocate has brought to light the fact that small firms have been increasingly competing with bigger companies for what should be government contracts allocated only to small businesses.

The American Small Business League has been vocal in its concerns that the Obama administration and small business leaders within the federal government are going to funnel traditionally small business contracts to venture capitalists and Fortune 500 firms.

The small business advocate announced that it had a hand in writing new legislation being introduced to the House of Representatives that would end the diversion of federal small business contracts to other players.

The ASBL claims that billions of dollars in small business federal contracts are handed to larger firms each year.




Source:  http://capitalsolutionsbancorp.com/news/small-businesses-to-benefit-from-new-legislation-20090603

New Bill in Congress Could Provide Major Boost to National Economy

Press Release

New Bill in Congress Could Provide Major Boost to National Economy

June 1, 2009

Petaluma, Calif. - Georgia Congressman Hank Johnson (D - GA4) has introduced a new bill in the House of Representatives that could provide a more dramatic boost to the national economy than any economic stimulus plan that has been proposed so far. (https://www.asbl.com/documents/hr2568.pdf) 

The new bill, H.R. 2568 the "Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act," will send over $100 billion a year in current federal infrastructure spending directly to middle class firms. The American Small Business League (ASBL) wrote the original draft of the bill. Congressman Johnson worked with the ASBL for several months to fine-tune the bill before it was introduced. The bill is based on current provisions of the Small Business Act that define a small business as a firm that is "independently owned." Currently, several loopholes in federal contracting law allow Fortune 500 firms to qualify as small businesses.

H.R. 2568 will close those loopholes, preventing the federal government from reporting awards to publicly traded firms as small business awards. Publicly traded firms do not qualify as "independently owned."

The latest U.S. Census Bureau data indicates that over 98 percent of all U.S. firms have less than 100 employees and these firms employ over 50.2 percent of the private sector workforce and are responsible for over 97 percent of net new jobs in America.

Earlier this year, the Obama Administration announced that every billion dollars in infrastructure spending generates approximately 40,000 new jobs. Directing over $100 billion a year in federal small business contracts to the small businesses that create over 97 percent of all new jobs in America could create over 4 million new jobs.

Since 2003, several federal investigations found that every year billions of dollars in federal small business contracts are diverted to Fortune 1000 corporations and even many of the largest firms in Europe. (https://www.asbl.com/documentlibrary.html) Investigative stories by ABC, CBS and CNN reported hundreds of firms such as Wal-Mart, Home Depot, Microsoft, Xerox, Dell Computer, John Deere, British Aerospace (BAE), Rolls-Royce and Dutch giant Buhrmann N.V. have all received federal small business contracts. (ABC, https://www.asbl.com/abc_evening_news.wmv; CBS, https://www.asbl.com/cbs.wmv; CNN, https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=1170

H.R. 2568 would bring an immediate end to the diversion of federal small business contracts to large businesses in the United States and Europe.

"It's unconscionable that some large corporations are the beneficiaries of small business contracts," Congressman Johnson said. "Especially given how many small businesses are struggling in this recession. H.R. 2568 will go a long way in helping correct this egregious error."

President Obama is expected to support H.R. 2568. In February of 2008 he released the statement, "It is time to end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants." (http://www.barackobama.com/2008/02/26/the_american_small_business_le.php

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