Obama Could Stimulate Economy By Keeping Campaign Promise

Press Release

Obama Could Stimulate Economy By Keeping Campaign Promise

February 11, 2009

Petaluma, Calif. – In February of 2008, President Obama released the following statement, "Small businesses are the backbone of our nation's economy and we must protect this great resource. 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

President Obama's statement was made in response to a series of over 15 federal investigations, which found the Bush Administration had diverted billions of dollars in federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms and thousands of other large businesses.

Investigative stories released by ABC, CBS and CNN (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) confirmed that many of the nation's top defense contractors were the actual recipients of most federal small business contracts. Firms such as Lockheed Martin, Boeing, General Dynamics, Raytheon, L-3 Communications, Northrop Grumman and Titan Industries received billions of dollars in U.S. government contracts reported as going to small businesses.

The Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Inspector General (OIG) released Report 5-15 which stated, "One of the most important challenges facing the Small Business Administration and the entire Federal government today is that large businesses are receiving small business procurement awards and agencies are receiving credit for these awards." (http://www.sba.gov/IG/05-15.pdf

A 2007 report from the SBA Office of Advocacy based on U.S. Census Bureau statistics found businesses with fewer than 20 employees were responsible for more than 97 percent of new jobs in America. CNNMoney.com and Inc.com released stories on the findings. (http://www.inc.com/news/articles/200708/data.html ; http://money.cnn.com/2008/07/30/smallbusiness/job_creation.fsb/index.htm)   
The American Small Business League (ASBL) is hoping to encourage President Obama and Congress to support draft legislation titled, the Fairness and Transparency in Contracting Act, which will keep President Obama's campaign promise to the small business community and create millions of new jobs.

The new legislation was drafted by the ASBL and is based on original provisions of the Small Business Act, which define a small business as "independently owned."  The legislation would exclude publicly traded firms from being counted towards the federal government's small business procurement goal. The essence of the ASBL legislation states, "The federal government and prime contractors can no longer report awards to publicly traded firms as small business awards."

"Everybody in America knows Fortune 500 firms should not be allowed to hijack government small business contracts. Seven years, 15 federal investigations, hundreds of stories in the press and thousands of hard working small businesses forced into bankruptcy are enough," ASBL President Lloyd Chapman said. "It is time for President Obama to do what he said he would do during the campaign and stop the diversion of hundreds of billions of dollars in federal small business contracts to corporate giants." 

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Stimulus Bill Ignores Firms that Create Ninety-Seven Percent of New Jobs

Press Release

Stimulus Bill Ignores Firms that Create Ninety-Seven Percent of New Jobs

February 9, 2009

Petaluma, Calif. - According to the latest United States Census Bureau statistics, businesses with fewer than 20 employees account for 90 percent of all U.S. firms and are responsible for more than 97 percent of all new jobs. The Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Advocacy released a report on the Census Bureau findings. (http://www.inc.com/news/articles/200708/data.html

CNNMoney.com and Inc.com released stories on the SBA report. (http://money.cnn.com/2008/07/30/smallbusiness/job_creation.fsb/index.htm

Since 2003, a series of more than 15 federal investigations have uncovered that the Bush Administration allowed billions of dollars in federal contracts earmarked for small businesses to be diverted to Fortune 500 firms and thousands of clearly large businesses around the world. (https://www.asbl.com/documentlibrary.html

Neither the House, nor Senate versions of the economic stimulus package contain any provisions to address the diversion of federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms.  Additionally, the bills fall short of addressing the needs of America's top job creators.

Hundreds of stories chronicling the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants have been released by virtually every major newspaper in the country. (https://www.asbl.com/news.php) Major television networks like CBS, ABC, FOX and CNN have covered the story.
(ABC, https://www.asbl.com/abc_evening_news.wmv; CBS, https://www.asbl.com/cbs.wmv; FOX, http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8y2F8zl2ebs; CNN, https://www.asbl.com/showmedia.php?id=1170)

In 2005, the SBA Office of Inspector General released Report 5-15, which described the diversion of federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms as, "One of the most important challenges facing the Small Business Administration and the entire Federal government today." (http://www.sba.gov/IG/05-15.pdf) 

In February 2008, President Obama released the following statement, "Small businesses are the backbone of our nation's economy and we must protect this great resource. 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) To date, he has not proposed even a single policy to make good on his campaign promise.

Based on information obtained through a series of successful Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuits against the Bush Administration, the American Small Business League (ASBL) estimates that every year up to $100 billion in federal contracts earmarked for America's top job creators are diverted to corporate giants in the defense industry.

On December 6, President Obama's transition team estimated that every billion dollars spent on federal infrastructure projects would create 40,000 jobs. (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/07/us/politics/07radio.html)  

The ASBL estimates that a provision in the stimulus bill that would end the diversion of federal small business contracts to corporate giants could create up to 4 million new jobs.

The powerful lobby for the defense industry has successfully blocked any attempts at legislation to stop the flow of billions of dollars in government small business contracts to many of the largest defense contractors in the country.

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Is Obama's SBA a Tool of Big Business?

News

Is Obama's SBA a Tool of Big Business?

By Dennis Romero
Entrepreneur.com
February 9, 2009

The American Small Business League has expressed concern that the U.S. Small Business Administration will continue to bow to big rather than small business as President Obama takes the reins of federal government largesse.

Under President George W. Bush, the SBA funneled billions in federal business to large corporations such as Lockheed Martin, even though the SBA is supposed to benefit small business with loans and government contracts.

So the league has had high hopes for the Obama Administration but is so far unimpressed, primarily because of the president's appointment of venture capitalist Karen Mills to head the SBA.

League president Lloyd Chapman argues that the National Venture Capital Association wants Congress to change the definition of small business to include their member investors, many of which are millionaires and billionaires. This would let them benefit from SBA-administered federal contracts.

Chapman says key members of Congress have received $1.2 million in campaign contributions from the venture capital industry, and that Obama's appointment of Mills might make it clear that he's in the association's corner as well.

As always, we here at Entrepreneur will be watching and reporting.

Source:  http://blog.entrepreneur.com/2009/02/is-obamas-sba-a-tool-of-big-business.php




Stimulus Bill Ignores Census Bureau Statistics

Press Release

Stimulus Bill Ignores Census Bureau Statistics

February 6, 2009

Petaluma, Calif. – According to a report from the Small Business Administration (SBA) Office of Advocacy, businesses with fewer than 20 employees account for 90 percent of all U.S. firms and are responsible for more than 97 percent of all new jobs. The SBA compiled the report from the latest United States Census Bureau data. (http://www.inc.com/news/articles/200708/data.html

Detailed analyses of the report were released by Inc.com and CNNMoney.com. (http://money.cnn.com/2008/07/30/smallbusiness/job_creation.fsb/index.htm

Although the nation's top economists agree that creating jobs is essential to a successful stimulus plan, neither the House, nor Senate versions of the stimulus bill contain any provisions specifically directed to the small businesses that create most new jobs.

Economic experts like Dr. Laura Tyson and Carly Fiorina have both acknowledged that directing federal infrastructure funds to small businesses would be the most effective way to stimulate our nation's failing economy.  Tyson is the former Chair of the U.S. President's Council of Economic Advisers during the Clinton Administration and is currently an economic adviser to President Barack Obama. Fiorina is the former CEO of Hewlett-Packard and McCain campaign economic advisor.

During the Bush Administration, federal programs developed to direct federal spending to small businesses were partially dismantled and plagued by widespread fraud and abuse. Since 2003, more than 15 federal investigations have found billions of dollars in federal contracts earmarked for small businesses were actually diverted to Fortune 500 firms, their subsidiaries and other clearly large businesses.

The American Small Business League (ASBL) has launched a national campaign to encourage President Obama and Congress to include a provision in the economic stimulus bill that would bolster federal contracting programs for small business, and eliminate existing abuses in federal small business programs that have diverted billions of dollars in federal small business contracts to Fortune 500 firms.

As early as February 2008, President Obama agreed with the ASBL by stating, "Small businesses are the backbone of our nation's economy and we must protect this great resource. 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

The ASBL estimates that if Congress added a provision to the stimulus bill that would stop the flow of federal small business contracts to large businesses, as much as $100 billion a year in existing federal infrastructure spending would be diverted back to America's small businesses.

On December 6, President Obama's transition team estimated that every billion dollars spent on federal infrastructure projects would create 40,000 jobs. Based on President Obama's estimation, the ASBL projects that a simple pro-small business provision in the stimulus bill to stop the flow of small business contracts to large corporations would create up to 4 million new jobs. (http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/07/us/politics/07radio.html)  
 
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The view from Maine Street

News

The view from Maine Street

Tapped by Obama to run the Small Business Administration, Wall Street veteran Karen Mills will need to move quickly to unlock the cash and assistance needed by struggling businesses - including those

By Sara Bridget Au
CNNMoney.com
February 6, 2009

BRUNSWICK, MAINE (CNNMoney.com) -- In Brunswick, Maine, the road running through the center of the town is spelled like the state: Maine Street. It's quintessential New England, picturesque and steeped in history - and like so many other downtown districts around the country, Maine Street is filled with small businesses struggling to survive the ongoing recession. But Maine Street's business owners will soon be looking to one of their own for help, when local resident Karen Gordon Mills takes charge as the new head of the Small Business Administration.

Until President Barack Obama tapped her as his SBA pick, Mills was best known in Brunswick as the wife of the president of Bowdoin College, the town's Ivy-esque liberal arts institution. Most of Mills' business dealings took place 350 miles south, in New York City, where she co-founded the venture capital firm Solera Capital in 1999 with two partners. Mills remained a managing director at Solera until 2007, although a spokeswoman for the company says her final few years were in an advisory capacity.

A Harvard MBA grad, Mills has spent most of her career working with corporate giants and companies that aspire to become them. Owner of the private-equity firm MMP Group, which she founded in 1993 and now runs from her house in Brunswick, Mills has sat on the boards of directors for Scotts Miracle-Gro (SMG) and for Arrow Electronics (ARW, Fortune 500), a $15 billion semiconductor distributor.

But if Mills wants to hear about the concerns of family-run business owners, she need only pick up the phone: Her parents, Ellen and Melvin Gordon, have owned most of famed candy maker Tootsie Roll Industries (TR) for five decades. The company reported sales of $496 million last year.

"She is an extraordinary choice for head of the SBA," says Michael Porter, a Harvard Business School professor who has known Mills since she was a student. "Given her background, she knows more about entrepreneurship and business growth than any administrator in recent memory."

Mills will need all of her skills and resources to pull the SBA out of its quagmire. Eviscerated by budget and staffing cuts and weighed down by bureaucracy, the SBA hasn't been a powerful force in Washington for years - Bush stripped from its administrator the Cabinet-level status President Clinton had accorded. At a time when companies most need access to cash, small business loan volumes are way down, stalling startups and endangering existing businesses that need help surviving the recession. Want to know how bad it's gotten? Just talk to the businesses along Maine Street.

"If I were able to have a conversation with Karen, I'd like to hear her ideas, like what kind of incentives for small businesses [might become available] that would hit the local level," says Martin Perry, 51, co-owner of Brunswick's Oo La La card and gift shop.

Mills was a customer of the shop, but she won't be able to stop by much longer. Just this week, after a stretch of days with negligible sales, Perry and his business partner, Henry D'Alessandris, decided to close their store.

Struggling on Maine Street

Perry and D'Alessandris, started, grew and sold two other small businesses, a lobster wharf and a restaurant, before opening Oo La La in 2005. D'Alessandris, 60, is also a chef, and has catered private parties for Mills, including her three sons' bar mitzvahs and a dinner with Senator Olympia Snowe, who backed Mills for the SBA job.

Like many proprietors in small towns across the country, Perry and D'Alessandris' have been struggling for months to keep their business afloat. They slashed payroll, cut back their inventory, and laid off their only employee. But that hasn't been enough.

"It's just been wicked slow, and I don't want to sit here for two more years before it gets better," D'Alessandris says. "I want to get out before worse gets worse."

Brunswick's economy was swamped when skyrocketing gas prices cut deep into prime tourist season this summer. Looming larger on the horizon is the scheduled closure of the Brunswick Naval Air Station in two years.

Richard Gnauck of Richard's, a German-American restaurant on Maine Street, fears the economic double-whammy of the recession and the base closure. "It's going to be a rough ride," he predicts. "You have to eat, but you don't have to go out to eat. That's one of the first things you cut."

Gnauck, 62, employs 13 people, including his two sons, who work in the kitchen. He owns his entire building and rents two upstairs apartments, often to people associated with the Navy. To conserve cash, Gnauck has put off large purchases and repairs. He may need to cut a shift from each employee to avoid layoffs.

"I can't go to the Senate and say I need a million dollars to pay off my mortgage," he says. "I just hope she can help us along, see the problems that small towns are having."

From Wall Street to Maine Street

Former Maine Governor Angus King, a fellow Brunswick resident, believes Mills' experience on Wall Street and Maine Street will be invaluable at the SBA.

"I think she has a foot in both worlds, in the sense that she worked in New York in private equity and that kind of thing, but then the businesses they were investing in were 'Main Street' kinds of businesses, like Annie's Macaroni & Cheese," says King, citing one of Solera Capital's best-known investments, in the Annie's Homegrown line of organic pantry staples.

Mills, who is keeping a low profile until after her confirmation hearing, declined to be interviewed for this article. If her past work is indicative of her future policy plans, one likely area of attention is business clustering, an economic approach popularized by Mills' former Harvard professor, Michael Porter, and by recent Nobel laureate Paul Krugman.

Clustering advocates promoting geographic pockets of expertise, allowing related businesses to build up and draw upon a shared pool of labor, suppliers and intellectual capital. The best known example of clustering in the U.S. is Silicon Valley, the epicenter of the tech industry.

In April, Mills co-authored a report for the Brookings Institute promoting an expanded federal-government role in fostering regional economic clusters. Her report recommended a two-prong effort: First, create an information center to map, track and conduct research on cluster dynamics; and second, establish a financial grants program to support regional and state cluster initiative programs. The report estimated the annual costs of this plan at $360 million.

Mills has already had a chance to put theory into action. Both King and Porter say her work has been instrumental in boosting Maine's boat-building cluster, which secured a $15 million grant from the Department of Labor's WIRED program.

Mills is also experienced with one of the most daunting issues confronting many locales: Replacing extinct industries. A member of the advisory board for the Governor's Council for the Redevelopment of the Brunswick Naval Air Station, Mills has been an active participant in discussions about how to replace the local military base after it closes in 2011.

"She's a very thoughtful and insightful person," says Steve Levesque, executive director of the redevelopment organization, who sits on the state board with Mills and counts her as a confidant. A former small business owner who's had dealings with the SBA, Levesque is delighted with Mills' selection because of her hands-on business experience.

"Unlike a lot of political appointments, they picked a practitioner," he says.

But much of Mills' practical experience is in high finance and public policy, a point of contention for advocates of the smallest small businesses. Lloyd Chapman, president of the American Small Business League, a Washington lobbying group, views Mills' background as a red flag: "She's a multimillionaire venture capitalist from New York. That doesn't fit my definition of small business."

Chapman has been fighting, and suing, the SBA for years over the number of government contracts earmarked for small businesses that instead go to firms controlled by venture capitalists or Fortune 500 companies.

"If, in her first week, she doesn't address this issue, she shouldn't be allowed to stay a second week," he says - but he doesn't hold out much hope. His prediction: "She'll be a big opponent of mine for the next four years."

Throughout her career, Mills has had one foot in the business world and one in the political realm. In addition to her service on assorted advisory boards, Mills has been an active political donor, contributing more than $60,000 over the past decade to a variety of Democratic office-seekers, including both to Barack Obama and, before he won his party's nomination, to his main rival, Hillary Clinton. In July, Mills donated $28,500 to the Obama Victory Fund, a fundraising operation that distributed cash to Obama's campaign and to the Democratic National Committee. She has worked closely with most of Maine's political leaders, including current governor John Baldacci, for whom she chairs an economic council.

But Mills' defenders say she is in tune with the needs of entrepreneurs running companies that will never be power players on Wall Street or in Washington. Jane Sheehan, CEO of the Foundation for Blood Research in Scarborough, Maine, served with Mills on the board of the Maine Technology Institute, a government-funded nonprofit that invests in local technology initiatives. Maine entrepreneurs often prefer to fly solo - Sheehan speaks admiringly of the "lobsterman mentality" of self-reliance and austerity - but Mills helped bring local owners together to collectively strengthen their businesses, Sheehan says.

"She demonstrated solutions [to them] that if they cluster together for a common purpose, the cluster would bring resources needed to make their industry grow," she says. "I think she'll be a breath of fresh air, not only for Maine small businesses, but for other rural states."

Awaiting confirmation

Mills confirmation hearing in the Senate has not yet been scheduled. As the Senate devotes its attention to crafting the massive and urgent $900 billion stimulus package, Mills has her own distractions: Soon after she accepted the SBA nomination, her college-age son Will required emergency surgery for a brain tumor. Mills' husband Barry has told students and colleagues at Bowdoin that Will's long-term prognosis looks good, and a spokeswoman for Obama's transition team says Mills' nomination is on-track and moving forward.

Balancing her professional and family lives has always been a priority for Mills. The mother of three sons, Mills commutes several days each week between New York City and Brunswick. With the SBA job, her weekly commute to Washington will be "just another short plane ride away," Barry Mills said in a note posted on Bowdoin's Web site.

Brunswick residents are used to seeing Karen at her sons' sports games, at college events, and around town at Brunswick's shops and restaurants. According to Mary Herman, the wife of former Governor King and a close friend of Mills, Karen has always scheduled business trips so that at least one parent is home for their teenagers every night. "They want to be there for homework and for supervision," Herman says. "She's absolutely down to earth and never hesitates to roll up her sleeves and be a helpful friend."

On Brunswick's Maine Street, business owners hope to see Mills roll up her sleeves at the SBA. "I don't see [the stimulus and bailout] trickling down real fast to the small businesses of America, but we do have hope with this new administration," Perry says.

"It would be a shame to see this quality of life go. You just need to look at Maine Street to know that things can go either way." To top of page

Source:  http://money.cnn.com/2009/02/06/smallbusiness/karen_mills_maine_street.smb/index.htm