Senator Reverend Warnock Urges Senate Leadership to Swiftly Bring Bipartisan Small Business Package to Senate Floor

Senator Reverend Warnock is urging Senate Majority Leader Schumer to quickly bring the Small Business COVID Relief Act of 2022to the Senate floor for a vote

This bipartisan bill will provide $40 billion to restaurants and other small businesses still recovering from the COVID pandemic

There are about 1.1 million small businesses in Georgia that employ 1.7 million Georgians, comprising more than 99 percent of Georgia’s businesses

The bill includes Senator Warnock’s bipartisan MUSIC Act, which he introduced with Senator Marsha Blackburn and would provide $2 billion in aid to businesses that support live events that have suffered during COVID-19

Senator Reverend Warnock: “To have an economic recovery that works for all Georgians, and all Americans, we must ensure that our community’s small businesses have adequate resources to succeed. By bringing the bipartisan Small Business COVID Relief Act of 2022to the Senate floor for a vote and working to pass the bill into law, we will be doing just that”

Washington, D.C. — As part of his efforts to curb rising costs and bring relief to Georgia’s economy, today U.S. Senator Reverend Raphael Warnock (D-GA) is urging Senate Majority Leader Schumer to quickly bring the Small Business COVID Relief Act of 2022 to the Senate floor for a vote. This bipartisan bill will provide $40 billion to restaurants and other small businesses still recovering from the COVID pandemic. 

“Small businesses form the backbone of many communities in Georgia, employing nearly half of all workers throughout the state. I worked with a bipartisan group of my colleagues to craft the legislation included in this bill to ensure that all small businesses in Georgia and across the country will continue to thrive. The Senate must act to prevent these small businesses from closing permanently due to rising costs, supply chain challenges, residual effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and other factors outside of their control by providing targeted relief to some of the hardest-hit industries,” wrote Senator Reverend Warnock. 

To have an economic recovery that works for all Georgians, and all Americans, we must ensure that our community’s small businesses have adequate resources to succeed. By bringing the bipartisan Small Business COVID Relief Act of 2022 to the Senate floor for a vote and working to pass the bill into law, we will be doing just that,” wrote Senator Reverend Warnock.

There are about 1.1 million small businesses in Georgia that employ 1.7 million Georgians, comprising more than 99 percent of Georgia’s businesses. The bill includes Senator Warnock’s bipartisan MUSIC Act, which he introduced with Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN) and would provide $2 billion in aid to businesses that support live events that have suffered during COVID-19.

The full letter can be accessed here or read below: 

Dear Majority Leader Schumer:

I write to urge you to bring S. 4008, the Small Business COVID Relief Act of 2022, to the Senate floor as soon as possible for a vote. Small businesses form the backbone of many communities in Georgia, employing nearly half of all workers throughout the state. I worked with a bipartisan group of my colleagues to craft the legislation included in this bill to ensure that all small businesses in Georgia and across the country will continue to thrive. The Senate must act to prevent these small businesses from closing permanently due to rising costs, supply chain challenges, residual effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and other factors outside of their control by providing targeted relief to some of the hardest-hit industries.

There are about 1.1 million small businesses in Georgia that employ 1.7 million Georgians, comprising more than 99 percent of Georgia’s businesses. Small businesses were some of the hardest hit in our economy when first facing the COVID-19 pandemic. Now, while dealing with the uncertainty of how the pandemic will continue its course, they are also tackling rising costs caused by corporate greed, geopolitical conflict, and lingering supply chain logjams. 

While thousands of Georgia’s small businesses benefited from targeted aid provided by past federal COVID-19 relief packages, many were also either excluded from programs or unable to receive assistance before programs closed or funding ran out. For example, although the Restaurant Relief Fund, established by the American Rescue Act of 2021, provided needed relief to 2,674 restaurants throughout Georgia, there are 5,007 pending applications for funding that has already dried up. At the same time, according to the Georgia Restaurant Association, more than 4,000 restaurants closed throughout the state during the pandemic, and another 3,000 may close by the end of the year.

The bipartisan Small Business COVID Relief Act of 2022would bolster the small businesses hit hardest by the pandemic, including restaurants, gyms, and live venue service and support companies. Not only would the bill directly assist these industries by providing aid to small businesses, but it would also further protect the jobs and communities that they operate in. It would also include bipartisan legislation I authored with Senator Blackburn to aid small businesses that support live events that have suffered significantly during COVID-19, as well as other legislation I have supported to aid restaurant and other venues that have been devastated by the loss of revenue due to the pandemic.

To have an economic recovery that works for all Georgians, and all Americans, we must ensure that our community’s small businesses have adequate resources to succeed. By bringing the bipartisan Small Business COVID Relief Act of 2022to the Senate floor for a vote and working to pass the bill into law, we will be doing just that.

Sincerely,

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