Louisiana receives pandemic funds
September 28, 2022
According to AP news, Louisiana was one of the states to receive a portion of the country’s $8.28 billion in pandemic funds.
On the same day the Federal Reserve gave a sobering report on the U.S. economy’s trajectory, administration officials highlighted how they have kept some of the nation’s smallest businesses afloat through the pandemic.
Roughly $8.28 billion in relief funds have been disbursed to 162 community financial institutions across the country, through Treasury’s Emergency Capitol Investment Program, officials said Wednesday.
Those financial institutions in turn offer loans to micro and small businesses.
The funding regime, abbreviated ECIP, is one of several pandemic relief programs meant to support community financial institutions — which provide loans, grants, and other assistance to small and minority-owned businesses that have difficulty getting funding from traditional banks.
Roughly 96% of Black-owned businesses are sole proprietorships and single employee companies. They have the hardest time finding funding and are often the first type of businesses impacted during economic downturns.
On the call with reporters, Harris and Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen highlighted some of the program recipients, including Native American Bank, which recently got a $10 million loan to finance an opioid addiction treatment facility in North Dakota, and a Georgia bank that recently gave a $650,000 working capital loan to an Atlanta-based, Black-owned affordable housing developer.
Mississippi, Louisiana, North Carolina, California, and Texas have received some of the biggest contributions.
“We’ve long known that too many Americans face significant barriers to participation in our financial system,” Yellen said. “I’m pleased that we’ve reached a milestone in our work to increase capital to these underserved communities.”
There were a record 5.4 million applications for new businesses filed in 2021, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, surpassing the previous peak in 2020 of 4.4 million.
Of that number, a growing share are sole proprietors and businesses without other employees. “Frankly, a lot of businesses are just recovering from Covid,” Sen. Mark Warner, D-Va., said on the call. He said that community banks “really do incredible work in reaching small businesses.”
Jo Roberts • Sep 28, 2022 at 4:13 pm
Why won’t anyone help us elderly ppl, we are suffering the most through this social security won’t help us they keep lying about giving us a monthly cost of living check with the prices through the roof now from inflation but we never get it, they build us up thinking we are gonna get help but never get it, all they do is lye!! We older Americans are always put on the back burner and never tended to, when are we gonna get any help??!!
Wanda Gauthier • Oct 28, 2022 at 3:53 pm
I have been wondering the same damn thing.We were the state in the worst hit last year also with two hurricane hit us within a month,when will our Governer send us all a check.Other states have recieved 2-3 checks already and still NOT A DAMN PENNY FOR US.HELP YOUR PEOPLE GOVERNER EDWARD
Pat • Sep 28, 2022 at 3:23 pm
Louisiana do not help nobody first of all did not helping to get your house fixed only houses still got blue tops on it church is not fixed and what are the roads not fixed so what are they doing with the money still we are still people and and we still have to live in Louisiana so if you’re not fixing Louisiana what are you doing with the money thank you, why are we that retired is still not doing well down here in Louisiana thank you I’m