http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20050908/ap_on_bi_ge/sept_11_lax_loans

By DIRK LAMMERS and FRANK BASS
Associated Press Writers

The government's $5 billion effort to help small businesses recover from
the Sept. 11 attacks was so loosely managed that it gave low-interest
loans to companies that didn't need terrorism relief - or even know they
were getting it, The Associated Press has found.

And while some at New York's Ground Zero couldn't get assistance they
desperately sought, companies far removed from the devastation - a South
Dakota country radio station, a Virgin Islands perfume shop, a Utah dog
boutique and more than 100 Dunkin' Donuts and Subway sandwich shops -
had no problem winning the government-guaranteed loans.

Dentists and chiropractors in numerous cities, as well as an Oregon
winery that sold trendy pinot noir to New York City restaurants also got
assistance.

"That's scary. Nine-11 had nothing to do with this," said James Munsey,
a Virginia entrepreneur who described himself as "beyond shocked" to
learn his nearly $1 million loan to buy a special events company in
Richmond was drawn from the Sept. 11 program.

"It would have been inappropriate for me to take this kind of loan," he
said, noting that the company he bought suffered no ill effects from
Sept. 11.

Arvind "Andy" Patel, 50, said he used his $350,000 loan in fall 2002 to
remodel his Dunkin' Donuts shop in western New York state and never knew
it was drawn through the Sept. 11 program.

"Not at all," Patel answered, when asked whether his business had been
hurt by the attacks.

Government officials said they believe banks assigned some loans to the
terror relief program without telling borrowers. Neither the government
nor its participating banks said they could provide figures on how many
businesses got loans that way.

But AP's nationwide investigation located businesses in dozens of states
who said they did not know their loans were drawn from the Sept. 11
programs, suggesting at least hundreds of millions of dollars went to
unwitting recipients.

The Small Business Administration, which administered the two programs
that doled out Sept. 11 recovery loans, said it first learned of the
problems through AP's review and was weighing whether an investigation
was needed. But officials also acknowledged they intended to spread the
post-Sept. 11 aid broadly because so many unexpected industries were
hurt.

"We started seeing business (needing help) in areas you wouldn't think
of - tourism, crop dusting, trade and transportation. ... So there were
a lot of examples you wouldn't think of, at first blush," SBA
Administrator Hector Barreto told AP.

In all, the government provided, approved or guaranteed nearly $4.9
billion in loans, and took credit for saving 20,000 jobs. That would put
the average cost of saving a job at about a quarter million dollars
each.

Of the 19,000 loans approved by the two programs, fewer than 11 percent
went to companies in New York City and Washington, according to an AP
computer analysis of loan records obtained under the Freedom of
Information Act.

"I had nothing here," said Shirla Yam, who runs a clothing store in the
former shadows of the twin towers that got a $20,000 grant from a local
advocacy group but no federal aid after Sept. 11. "I don't know if I'll
be here next month."

Under one of the programs, SBA lent money directly to companies that
provided detailed statements on how they were hurt. The other program
provided incentives - and guaranteed loans from default - so banks could
lend money to companies they determined were hurt by the post-Sept. 11
economic downturn.

Most loans were well below market rates - as low as 4 percent, documents
show.

SBA officials acknowledged the second program, the Supplementary
Terrorism Activity Relief (STAR), left banks on an honor system to
determine worthy loan recipients.

"One lender could have been really strict and specific about the
borrower providing the documentation to prove that they were affected by
the Sept. 11 attacks, and another banker may not have, or may have had
ulterior motives for approving loans," said SBA spokeswoman Carol
Chastang. 

SBA documents obtained by AP show banks had a strong incentive to
approve as many loans as possible from the terror program. The banks
profited from the interest while incurring little risk because the
government guaranteed 75 percent to 85 percent of each loan.

And the annual fee the lenders paid to SBA to get the government
guarantee was slashed from 0.5 percent to 0.25 percent - meaning lenders
saved an additional $5,000 a year for every $2 million they loaned under
STAR. 

"There was definitely an advantage to the lender to get that reduced
fee," said Christopher Chavez, an SBA official in Colorado. He said he
suspects lenders might not always have talked to businesses about damage
from Sept. 11 before moving loans into STAR.

While SBA officials expressed surprise at AP's findings, banking
officials said the agency encouraged the industry to use the post-Sept.
11 programs liberally, especially when its normal guaranteed lending
program was hit by steep budget cuts in 2002.

"They had personnel at our conference stand up and say if you cannot
find a reason to move the loan over to the STAR program, contact us and
we'll help you find a reason to move it over," recalled Tony Wilkinson,
president of the National Association of Government Guaranteed Lenders.

Major lenders like Wachovia and Wells Fargo declined to say how many
loans they shifted into the terror relief program, saying only that they
followed the law. 

Wells Fargo, the nation's second largest SBA lender, said the STAR
program enabled lenders "to provide funds to new and mature businesses
impacted by 9/11" and the bank "continues to strictly adhere to SBA
operational standards for all SBA loan originations."

Many loans went to local outlets of some of America's most famous and
lucrative companies. For instance, 55 Dunkin' Donuts shops across the
country, 14 Quiznos sandwich shops and 52 Subway sandwich shops got
loans. Fourteen Dairy Queens - part of the ice cream franchise partly
owned by Wall Street billionaire Warren Buffett - won more than $5
million in loans. 

"I just applied for the loan at the bank. I had no idea where the funds
came from," said Tom Mayl, who got two SBA Sept. 11 loans totaling more
than $800,000 to open a Subway shop in suburban Dayton, Ohio, and a
Buffalo Wild Wings restaurant in Sidney, Ohio.

"It doesn't seem right, just on the surface, but I really don't know the
details," Mayl said.

Don Robinson said he too didn't need or ask for terrorism relief when he
got a $765,000 government-backed loan in 2003 - drawn without his
knowledge from the Sept. 11 program - to start a motorcycle shop in
Brigham City, Utah.

"Actually, the motorcycle industry grew after 9/11," Robinson said.
"People just took their money out of the stock market to buy toys."

Dentists and chiropractors also were frequent, but unwitting,
beneficiaries. "They weren't putting their health second to anything
else," chiropractor Colby Shores said of his patients in the suburbs of
Rochester, N.Y. He was unaware his $87,000 loan with a 4 percent
interest rate came from the terror relief program.

The loan patterns uncovered by AP left some seething in the
neighborhoods directly scarred by Sept. 11.

"You have to take it back and give it to us. Even now, I could use it,"
said Mike Yagudayev, who said the SBA would only provide him $20,000 of
a $70,000 loan he requested to rebuild his hair salon flattened by the
collapse of World Trade Center towers in New York.

"I said, `You know what, take it back. Twenty thousand is like an
insult,'" he recalled.

Thousands of businesses far from the devastation had no trouble getting
SBA loans, simply submitting short applications that linked their slow
business to the widespread economic fallout caused by Sept. 11. For
instance: 

_Karl Grimmelmann, general manager of KBFS-AM "Hit Kickin' Country" in
Belle Fourche, S.D., borrowed $135,000 from SBA's disaster program after
learning about it from a news release. He said his station was forced to
pay more money to cover national news and also lost advertisers.
"Everybody started holding onto their money, plain and simple," he said.


_Margie Olson, co-owner of the Torii Mor Winery in McMinnville, Ore.,
said her business needed a $125,000 loan because it couldn't sell
high-end pinot noir to Manhattan restaurants that had closed. "Everyone
started hitting the heavy stuff," Olson said, laughing.

_Melva Kravitz, co-owner of the Little Dogs Resort & Salon in Salt Lake
City that offers boarding and grooming services for small dogs, said
people stopped taking vacations and boarding their pets after Sept. 11,
requiring her $50,000 loan. "It was awful," she said. "You just couldn't
go on." 

_Christine Hilty, co-owner of Violettes Boutique on St. Croix in the
U.S. Virgin Islands, said the perfume shop lost 60 percent of its
business overnight as tourism stopped. She got a $169,500 loan from SBA.
"Would we have closed our doors? It was close," she said. "Everyone was
afraid to get on a plane. Tourism was totally halted."

Though the loan programs have ended, the government is inheriting a
residual burden. Already, taxpayers have been forced to cover about 600
defaulted disaster loans - some approaching $1 million each - from
companies that went bankrupt or closed. More defaults are expected.

Jim Hammersley, who runs the SBA's collection arm, said many applicants
asked for too much or too little money to keep their businesses afloat.

"The folks that were dealing with the aftermath of 9/11 didn't have
anything that certain to try and gauge whether they needed money or how
much they needed," he said.

___ 

AP Writers Paul Foy in Utah, Amy Westfeldt and Ben Dobbins in New York,
Steve Paulsen in Colorado, Carrie Spencer in Ohio and Stephanie
Stoughton in Virginia contributed to this story. 



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