President Bush signed into law an expansion of small-business help for veterans and reservists.
The bipartisan initiative, now Public Law 110-186, creates new grants and loan programs aimed specifically at small businesses harmed by mobilization of reservists who are either owners or key employees, and it extends help for small-business owners, including veterans’ business outreach centers that would play a greater role in transition counseling for people being released from active duty.
One of the new initiatives is a pre-deployment loan that would allow Guard or reserve members who own small businesses to borrow money to help keep their businesses going while they are away — before they suffer financial problems.
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., one of the chief sponsors of the legislation, said he hopes the changes are a tangible improvement for veterans and reservists. “It means they will have access to real tools to help them start or grow a small business,” Kerry said. “Our veterans who put their lives on the line for our national security deserve economic opportunity when they come home, and this bipartisan achievement is one small way we can repay them for their hard work and sacrifice.”
The chief Republican cosponsor, Sen. Olympia Snowe of Maine, said the weakening state of the economy underscores why small businesses need help when they are harmed by Guard and reserve members being called to duty.
Photo by MSDesigns.
New Law Will Help Small-Biz Owners
February 20, 2008 by Rich | 1 Comment
In Employees, Military, Operations















L.Meri on February 20th, 2008 at 8:07 am
I think this is great. We need all the new businesses we can get. Our country needs the boost that small businesses create. Hats off to the people that supported this legislation.