New PPP Legislation Improves Borrower Flexibility – Senate Committee Insists on Disclosure of PPP Recipients and Related Data


On June 5, 2020, President Donald Trump signed into law a bill, the Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act of 2020 (H.R. 7010), that will give borrowers of the US$670 billion PPP more time to spend the PPP proceeds and use them on a broader categories of expenses while still qualifying to have the loans forgiven.

In this way, the law is intended to help address widespread concern that PPP borrowers may be stuck with the debt because the programs’ requirements to have the loans forgiven are unduly burdensome.

Specifically, this legislation, which passed in the Senate by unanimous consent on June 3, 2020, and last week in the House in a 417-1 vote, will do the following:

According to the Small Business Administration (SBA), since mid-May, net weekly PPP lending has actually been negative as fewer firms applied for loans, and some borrowers have returned them. Indeed, as of May 21, 2020, the SBA has approved US$512.2 billion in PPP loans – nearly US$150 billion less than the US$660 billion allocated to the program. As of today, about US$120 billion remains available for loans under the program; some believe demand can be stimulated if the forgiveness rules are relaxed, as the new law does.

Notably, enactment of this law was achieved despite initial resistance by Senate Republicans, particularly Senators Ron Johnson (R-Wisconsin) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), with Johnson on Wednesday blocking an initial attempt to pass the bill unanimously and demanding assurances about the legislation’s intent.

Moreover, Senate Small Business Committee Chair Senator Marco Rubio (R-Florida) and Senator Susan Collins (R-Maine) raised concerns with the drafting of the House bill under consideration that would deprive businesses of having any portion of their loan forgiven if they do not hit the 60% payroll requirement, but did not stand in the way of its passage in the Senate.

On Wednesday, Senate Majority Whip John Thune (R-South Dakota) told reporters that technical problems with the House bill will “have to get fixed in some fashion” but “legislatively how we do it is still an open question.” So, we expect further legislative activity intended to improve or repair aspects of the PPP and will report as warranted.

In separate developments, Senators Rubio and Ben Cardin (D-Maryland) on Wednesday sent a bipartisan letter to Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin and SBA Administrator Jovita Carranza urging them to disclose more information on loans issued under the PPP, including the names of borrowers.

The SBA has yet to provide this information, sought by the senators weeks ago. The insistence by congressional overseers to have the Trump Administration fully disclose recipients of PPP loans and associated data will likely continue and shape congressional oversight of the program’s execution going forward.

Pablo Carrillo contributed to this article.


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National Law Review, Volume X, Number 157