The WaPo had a good editorial today hammering the Small Business Administration for its ridiculous performance, particularly in response to disaster loans. There was just one thing the Post missed.
At a recent hearing of the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, Hector Barreto, Bush’s hand-picked man to head the SBA, didn’t reassure lawmakers that he knows what he’s doing.
The committee chairwoman, Sen. Olympia J. Snowe (R-Maine), began the session by pointing out that the Small Business Administration had, at that time, processed only 10 percent of 28,540 applications for disaster loans from small businesses in the Gulf Coast area and had approved only 3 percent of them. Mr. Barreto responded with a long and self-pitying description of how difficult things remain in the Gulf, how emergencies are not really his responsibility and how much his agency’s performance had improved lately.
Unfortunately, “improvement” isn’t the first word that comes to mind when the SBA’s loan records are examined a month after that hearing. As of Tuesday, the SBA had received 37,214 applications for disaster business loans. Of those, 2,127 have been approved. Meanwhile, Mr. Barreto and his agency are still resisting the committee’s proposal to give the SBA funding to make short-term “bridge loans” similar to those set up to help businesses affected by the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks (loans that the affected states were making before they ran out of funding), arguing that the same needs are met through other SBA programs. This may well represent the first time a government agency has resisted a congressional attempt to give it more money. It may also help explain why economic recovery in Louisiana is going so slowly.
Indeed, the Small Business Administration’s apparent inability to process Katrina and Rita-related loans has been embarrassing for a while.
So, what’s the unstated tidbit? Hector Barreto is a former Republican fundraiser (read: inexperienced hack) who has no business running the SBA.
No one can accuse Hector Barreto of being unfamiliar with small business. His Los Angeles firm, Barreto Insurance & Financial Services Company, had only ten employees. Alas, now that he is in charge of a bigger operation — the Small Business Administration (SBA) has over 3,000 employees, a budget of about $600 million, and a portfolio of loans totaling $45 billion — Barreto is struggling.
Last year, the SBA failed to notify Congress that it needed additional funding for its largest and most popular loan program and was forced to temporarily shutter it because, as Barreto’s spokesperson explained, it was “out of money.” Meanwhile, the SBA was doing such a poor job managing the $5 billion in loans the government set aside to help small businesses recover from September 11 that, according to an Associated Press investigation, the vast majority of the money went to businesses not affected by the terrorist attacks — including a South Dakota country radio station, a Utah dog boutique, and more than 100 Dunkin’ Donuts and Subway sandwich shops.
I sometimes wonder which is worse with the Bush administration — the corruption or the incompetence. It’s a close call, isn’t it?