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New Report Shows Small Business Lending Program Up in Michigan

Washington - U.S. Representative Gary Peters announced today that Michigan small business lending continued to grow through the program he first designed in 2009. According to a new report released by the U.S. Department of Treasury, the State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI), a program Peters developed based on a successful state program in Michigan, has resulted in $79 million to fund an innovative lending program in the state. Michigan also leads the nation in SSBCI funds deployed and is in the top five in the percentage of SSBCI allocations that are expended in the state. The SSBCI program leverages significant private capital with targeted federal investments. Peters first proposed the idea of partnering Main Street Banks with Michigan small businesses to expand access to credit and promote local economic growth in 2009. His idea was incorporated into the Small Business Jobs Act as the Small Business Lending Fund (SBLF). In addition, Peters authored the Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) that was included in the Small Business Jobs Act, which passed the U.S. House of Representatives and was signed into law in 2010.

“Small businesses in Michigan are a vital part of our economic future. The SSBCI program has helped thousands of small businesses get the private investment they need to thrive. It has helped these business grow across Michigan, creating jobs and growing our middle class. I will continue to fight for Michigan small businesses and develop thoughtful solutions to support job creation and a vibrant middle class in Michigan.”

The FY 15 budget also includes $1.5 billion for a second round of the State Small Business Credit Initiative (SSBCI) in order to support State-sponsored public-private partnerships to increase lending, investment, and technical assistance to small businesses and manufacturers.

Before entering public service, Peters worked as a successful businessman. In Washington, he has focused on hearing the concerns and ideas of Michigan small business owners and entrepreneurs. Peters helped write the Small Business Jobs Act to expand credit to Michigan small businesses and help them grow and create jobs.

Background:

In September 2009, U.S. Rep. Peters was the first Member of Congress to call for the creation of a lending fund for smaller lenders, publishing an op-ed in The Hill on the need to spur more small business lending through community banks (Click here to read that op-ed).

In November 2009, U.S. Rep. Peters convened a field hearing of the House Financial Services Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations in Michigan to hear directly from small businesses and community banks about the need to spur small business lending and strategies for doing so.  (Click here for more information on that hearing).

Following that field hearing, U.S. Rep. Peters authored a letter signed onto by other Members of Congress calling for the Treasury Department to undertake solutions advocated by witnesses at the hearing, including partnering with community banks to spur small business lending.  (Click here to view that letter).

In January 2010 President Obama announced in his State of the Union address that he was calling on Congress to pass legislation redirecting funding away from the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and using it to help spur small business lending (Click here for Peters’ statement).

In September 2010, just one year from the time U.S. Rep. Peters called for the creation of a small business lending fund, the Small Business Jobs Act was signed into law.  The bill was authored in the Financial Services Committee, of which Peters is a member.

President Obama wrote Peters, thanking him for his “leadership” on the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010, hailing it as “the most significant step on behalf of our small businesses in more than a decade.” This new Treasury report further underscores how successful this program has been.

 

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