Senate Confirms Isabel Guzman to Lead Small Business Agency

Senate Confirms Isabel Guzman to Lead Small Business Agency
Isabella Casillas Guzman is sworn in at the Confirmation Hearing Held For SBA Administrator at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, on Feb. 3, 2021. (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)
The Associated Press
3/16/2021
Updated:
3/16/2021

WASHINGTON—The Senate on Tuesday approved President Joe Biden’s pick to oversee the Small Business Administration.

The vote to confirm Isabel Guzman was 81-17. She is the 18th member of Biden’s Cabinet to win Senate confirmation.

Guzman is a former Obama administration SBA official who currently heads California’s Office of the Small Business Advocate. In that role, she oversaw efforts to help that state’s small businesses survive the pandemic.

“I am confident that I can hit the ground running,” Guzman told senators in her confirmation hearing.

The Small Business Administration oversees loan programs to help businesses recover from natural disasters, enhances access to capital through loan guarantees and provides training and technical assistance. Guzman said she would work to ensure money gets into the hands of the small businesses hurt the most by the pandemic and the economic crisis through no fault of their own.

“I have every confidence that under Ms. Guzman’s leadership, the SBA will help small business owners hold onto their dreams until our economy comes roaring back,” said Senator Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y.

Schumer noted that pandemic relief programs overseen by the Small Business Administration will dole out more than $1 trillion to the nation’s small businesses, nonprofits and religious institutions. The largest chunk of that funding will come through the Paycheck Protection Program, which provides low-interest loans that are full forgivable if 60 percent of the loan is spent on payroll and the balance on other qualified expenses.

The Government Accountability Office recently placed emergency small-business loans on its list of programs considered highly vulnerable to fraud, waste or mismanagement.

By Kevin Freking