- Large companies and big chains taking loans spurred outrage
- Borrowers who improperly took loans have criminal liability
Treasury Secretary
Mnuchin said the loans of as much as $10 million meant to keep workers on payrolls under the Paycheck Protection Program were intended for small firms, not public companies and big chains that have access to other capital. The
“I want to be very clear it’s the borrowers who have criminal liability if they made this certification and it’s not true,” Mnuchin said Tuesday on CNBC. “We will make sure that what was the intent for taxpayers is fulfilled here.”
Mnuchin said it was “outrageous” that the
A backlash against those companies
The SBA and Treasury issued
Senate Minority Leader
While Democrats helped get money in new Paycheck Protection Program funds that would be “walled off” for smaller businesses in legislation Congress passed last week, he said the implementation of the small business rescue program has been an “abject failure” and more work is needed.
Speaking on MSNBC, Schumer said he will send a letter Tuesday to Senate Majority Leader
The relaunch of the Paycheck Protection Program with an additional $320 billion approved by Congress last week got off to a
Mnuchin said on Fox Business that “we did have systems issues yesterday” and the SBA team was “working through the night” to correct the problems. But he said the certification borrowers make when they apply is important because “we’re not going to be able to check all the loans before they go out the door.”
The Treasury secretary said the program is getting funding to small businesses with an average loan size of $206,000 so far, despite the attention the large firms that took relief at the expense of mom-and-pop shops are getting.
“It is unfortunate that there’s a small number of companies that have created a lot of publicity that took loans,” he said on CNBC. “I think it was inappropriate for most of these companies to take the loans.”
(Updates with additional details from fifth paragraph.)
--With assistance from
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To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Elizabeth Wasserman, Laurie Asséo
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