From Military.com:
“Veteran-Owned Food Businesses
Get Priority In New Cash Assistance Program”
A new economic assistance program
for food service operators will begin accepting registrations on April 30,
2021, and for the first three weeks, veterans will be given priority treatment.
The Restaurant Revitalization Fund, part of the American Rescue Plan Act of
2021, will be administered by the Small Business Administration (SBA) and
provide economic assistance to food service owners affected by the COVID-19
pandemic. The program will provide business owners with direct cash grants to
make up for losses they may have suffered because of the numerous state and
local government-imposed COVID-19 shutdowns and other economic factors that may
have affected their business operations.
Registration begins at 9 a.m.
April 30, with applications being accepted until noon May 3. Applications from
businesses owned by veterans, women and socially or economically disadvantaged
individuals will receive priority handling for the first 21 days of the
program. After that, all applications will be processed in the order received.
The program will continue until its $9.5 billion in funding is gone. While the
program is being implemented and administered by the Small Business
Administration, there is no limitation on the number of employees an eligible
business can have. Two other assistance programs created by the federal
government last year to help small businesses affected by the COVID-19 pandemic
ran out of funding in record time. Those programs had much more funding but
were not limited to food service enterprises. The new program will provide
direct cash payments for pandemic-related revenue losses to eligible food
service businesses including: Restaurants; Food stands, food trucks and food
carts; Caterers; Bars, saloons, lounges and taverns; Snack and nonalcoholic
beverage bars; Bakeries whose onsite sales comprise at least 33% of gross
receipts; Breweries, brewpubs, tasting rooms, taprooms, wineries and
distilleries whose onsite sales comprise at least 33% of gross receipts; Inns
whose onsite sales comprise at least 33% of gross receipts; and Licensed
alcohol producers that allow the public to taste, sample, or purchase products.
There is a limit of $10 million
in funding per business. The money does not have to be repaid as long as it is
used in accordance with regulations. "Restaurants are the core of our
neighborhoods and propel economic activity on main streets across the
nation," SBA administrator Isabella Casillas Guzman said in a press
release. "They are among the businesses that have been hardest hit and
need support to survive this pandemic. We want restaurants to know that help is
here."
^ I’m glad that Veterans were
given priority for this. ^
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