MCBA Applauds SBA Bills Spurred By Recent MCBA Congressional Testimony

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MCBA Applauds SBA Bills Spurred By Recent MCBA Congressional Testimony

MCBA applauds introduction of Small Business Administration bills spurred by recent MCBA congressional testimony

Minority Cannabis Business Association

Washington D.C.- The Minority Cannabis Business Association celebrated a victory Friday, applauding Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez and others who introduced multiple bills to expand access to small business administration resources for existing and aspiring cannabis entrepreneurs, with a clear focus on achieving equity as laid out in MCBA’s model policies. The introduction of these bills comes on the heels of MCBA’s congressional lobby day, numerous congressional briefings and congressional testimony by MCBA President Shanita Penny.

“I am pleased to see our efforts furthered through actionable public policy. We look forward to working with Congresswoman Velazquez to make this bill law.” MCBA President Shanita Penny

“This bill is a clear indication of the strength of our movement to impact legislation at the local, state, and federal levels. Equity in cannabis has become the industry standard from Illinois to D.C. and we’re just getting started” said MCBA Vice President and Policy Committee Chair Jason Ortiz.

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Chairwoman Nydia Velázquez (D-NY), introduced H.R.3540, Ensuring Safe Capital Access for All Small Businesses Act, which would allow marijuana businesses to access resources from the federal Small Business Administration (SBA). Those resources include microloans, disaster assistance and the loan guarantee program. Penny states, “in addition to support for small and disadvantaged businesses, social equity and economic empowerment programs throughout the country are depending on these resources to address and prevent predatory private lending and partnerships as program participants attempt to enter the cannabis industry with no access to institutional lending for capital.”

“As our society continues to move the needle on this issue, we must recognize that legal cannabis businesses are often small businesses that fuel local economies and create new jobs,” Velázquez said in a press release.

“That is why I am pleased to introduce legislation to extend affordable lending options to small businesses that operate in the cannabis space, while simultaneously recognizing the structural disadvantages facing entrepreneurs from communities of color,” she said.AMIBC® - VOTE! BE COUNTED! BE HEARD!

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