

 
SBA Veterans Assistance Programs: 
An Analysis of Contemporary Issues 
Updated May 12, 2022 
Congressional Research Service 
https://crsreports.congress.gov 
R42695 
 
  
 
SBA Veterans Assistance Programs: An Analysis of Contemporary Issues 
 
Summary 
Several federal agencies, including the Small Business Administration (SBA), provide training 
and other assistance to veterans seeking civilian employment. For example, the Department of 
Defense (DOD), in cooperation with the SBA, Department of Labor, Department of Veterans 
Affairs, and several other federal agencies, operates the Transition Goals Plans Success program 
(Transition GPS), which provides employment information and entrepreneurship training to 
exiting military servicemembers to assist them in transitioning from the military to the civilian 
labor force. 
In recent years, the unemployment rate among veterans as a whole has generally been similar to 
or lower than the unemployment rate for nonveterans 18 years and older. However, veterans who 
have left the military since September 2001 have experienced higher unemployment than other 
veterans and, in some years, higher unemployment than nonveterans. As a result, Congress has 
focused much of its attention on finding ways to assist veterans who have left the military since 
September 2001. 
The SBA provides management and technical assistance services to more than 100,000 veterans 
each year through its various management and technical assistance training partners (e.g., Small 
Business Development Centers, Women’s Business Centers [WBCs], SCORE [formerly the 
Service Corps of Retired Executives], and Veterans Business Outreach Centers [VBOCs]). The 
SBA’s Office of Veterans Business Development (OVBD) also administers several programs to 
assist veterans, including the Operation Boots to Business: From Service to Startup initiative, 
which is part of DOD’s Transition GPS program. 
The expansion of federal employment training programs targeted at specific populations, such as 
women and veterans, has led some Members and organizations to ask if these programs should be 
consolidated. In their view, eliminating program duplication among federal business assistance 
programs across federal agencies, and within the SBA, would result in lower costs and improved 
services. Others argue that keeping these business assistance programs separate enables them to 
offer services that match the unique needs of various underserved populations, such as veterans. 
In their view, instead of considering program consolidation as a policy option, the focus should be 
on improving communication and cooperation among the federal agencies providing assistance to 
entrepreneurs. 
This report opens with an examination of the economic circumstances of veteran-owned 
businesses. It then provides a brief overview of veterans’ employment experiences, comparing 
unemployment and labor force participation rates for veterans, veterans who have left the military 
since September 2001, and nonveterans. The report also describes employment assistance 
programs offered by several federal agencies to assist veterans in their transition from the military 
to the civilian labor force and examines, in greater detail, the SBA’s veteran business 
development programs, the SBA’s efforts to assist veterans’ access to capital, and the SBA’s 
service-disabled veteran-owned (SDVOSB) federal procurement program. It also discusses the 
SBA’s Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loan program and P.L. 114-38, the Veterans 
Entrepreneurship Act of 2015, which authorized and made permanent, under specified 
circumstances, the SBA’s recent practice of waiving the SBAExpress loan program’s one time, 
up-front loan guarantee fee for veterans (and their spouses). 
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Contents 
SBA Assistance for Veterans ........................................................................................................... 1 
An Economic Profile of Veteran-Owned Businesses ...................................................................... 2 
Demographics ........................................................................................................................... 3 
Employment, Payroll, and Sales/Receipts ................................................................................. 3 
Veterans’ Employment Data ............................................................................................................ 4 
Veterans’ Employment and Business Development Programs ........................................................ 5 
SBA’s Office of Veterans Business Development .................................................................... 5 
OVBD Outreach Funding ................................................................................................... 7 
OVBD Outreach Programs ................................................................................................. 8 
VBOCs and the Boots to Business Initiative .................................................................... 10 
Congressional Issues: Duplication of Services .............................................................................. 12 
Veterans’ Access to Capital ........................................................................................................... 15 
Veterans and SBA Loan Programs .......................................................................................... 16 
SBA’s 7(a) Loan Guaranty Program ................................................................................. 16 
SBA’s 504/CDC Loan Guaranty Program ........................................................................ 17 
SBA’s 7(a) Loan Guaranty Subprograms and Fee Waivers .............................................. 18 
Congressional Issues: Access .................................................................................................. 21 
Federal Contracting Goals for Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Businesses .................... 23 
The Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loan Program ................................................. 28 
Concluding Observations .............................................................................................................. 30 
 
Tables 
Table 1. SBA Office of Veteran’s Business Development Veterans Outreach 
Appropriation, FY2015-FY2022 .................................................................................................. 7 
Table 2. Veterans Business Outreach Centers and Boots to Business Initiative, Number of 
Clients and Participants, FY2013-FY2021 ................................................................................ 10 
Table 3. 7(a) Loan Guaranty Program Approvals, FY2010-FY2021 ............................................ 17 
Table 4. 504/CDC Loan Guaranty Program Approvals, FY2010-FY2021 ................................... 18 
Table 5. Federal Procurement Goals and Percentage of FY2020 Federal Contract Dollars 
Awarded to Small Businesses, by Type ...................................................................................... 24 
  
Contacts 
Author Information ........................................................................................................................ 32 
 
Congressional Research Service 
SBA Veterans Assistance Programs: An Analysis of Contemporary Issues 
 
SBA Assistance for Veterans 
The Small Business Administration (SBA) administers several programs to support small 
business owners and prospective entrepreneurs. For example, it provides management and 
technical assistance training programs to assist with business formation and expansion; loan 
guaranty programs to enhance small business owners’ access to capital; and programs to increase 
small business opportunities in federal contracting, including oversight of the service-disabled 
veteran-owned small business (SDVOSB) federal procurement program.1 The SBA also provides 
direct loans for owners of businesses of all sizes, homeowners, and renters to assist their recovery 
from natural disasters.  
P.L. 93-237, to amend the Small Business Act (1974), required the SBA to provide special 
consideration to veterans in all of its programs. To meet this mandate, the SBA created the Office 
of Veterans Business Development (OVBD) to administer programs specifically designed to 
assist veteran-owned small businesses (VOSBs).2  
As will be discussed, the OVBD currently administers 22 Veteran Business Outreach Centers 
(VBOCs), the Boots to Business and Boots to Business: Reboot initiatives, the Service-Disabled 
Veteran Entrepreneurship Training Program (SDVETP), the Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for 
Veterans with Disabilities (EBV) program, the Veteran Federal Procurement Entrepreneurship 
Training Program (VFPETP), and the Women Veteran Entrepreneurship Training Program 
(WVETP).3 These programs are available to active duty, National Guard, and Reserve 
servicemembers and veteran or military spouses.4  
In addition, the SBA’s management and technical assistance training resource partners (e.g., 
Small Business Development Centers, Women’s Business Centers, and SCORE [formerly the 
Service Corps of Retired Executives]) provide free training to small business owners and 
                                                 
1 For further information and analysis concerning the Small Business Administration’s (SBA’s) entrepreneurial 
education programs, see CRS Report R41352, Small Business Management and Technical Assistance Training 
Programs, by Robert Jay Dilger. For further information and analysis concerning the SBA’s access to capital programs, 
see CRS Report R41146, Small Business Administration 7(a) Loan Guaranty Program, by Robert Jay Dilger, and CRS 
Report R41184, Small Business Administration 504/CDC Loan Guaranty Program, by Robert Jay Dilger. 
2 Initially, the SBA’s Office of Field Services was assigned the responsibility to ensure the SBA met this statutory 
requirement. In 1982, the SBA’s Office of Veterans Business Enterprise was created within the Office of the Chief 
Counsel for Advocacy to address veteran needs. Soon thereafter, the office was shifted to the Office of the Associate 
Deputy Director for Special Programs and renamed the Office of Veterans Affairs. In 1985, the Office of Veterans 
Affairs was relocated to the SBA’s Office of Business Development. During the remainder of the 1980s and 1990s, the 
SBA regularly offered management and training conferences, seminars, workshops, and other meetings for veterans, 
primarily through Veteran Affairs Officers (VAOs) located in its regional and district offices and through annual 
agreements with SBA resource partners, including SCORE (formerly the Service Corps of Retired Executives) and 
Small Business Development Centers. P.L. 106-50, the Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development 
Act of 1999, directed the SBA to establish the Office of Veterans Business Development (OVBD) to be administered 
by an Associate Administration that reports directly to the SBA Administrator. The OVBD was established on January 
12, 2001, replacing the SBA’s Office of Veterans Affairs. See U.S. Congress, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, 
Subcommittee on Education, Training and Employment, Oversight on the Small Business Loan Program for Veterans, 
hearing, 98th Cong., 1st sess., March 23, 1983, Serial No. 98-6 (Washington: GPO, 1983), pp. 7, 37-39, 103, 122; U.S. 
Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Activities of the Small Business Administration’s Office of Veterans 
Affairs, hearing, 99th Cong., 1st sess., November 13, 1985, S. Hrg. 99-388 (Washington: GPO, 1986), pp. 22-47, 200, 
340-363; and SBA, “FY2002 Budget Request and Performance Plan,” pp. 67, 69, no longer available online. 
3 SBA, “FY2023 Congressional Budget Justification FY2021 Annual Performance Report,” pp. 14, 91-94, at 
https://www.sba.gov/document/report-congressional-budget-justification-annual-performance-report (hereinafter SBA, 
“FY2023 Congressional Budget Justification FY2021 Annual Performance Report”). 
4 SBA, “FY2023 Congressional Budget Justification FY2021 Annual Performance Report,” p. 91. 
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prospective entrepreneurs, including veterans. Overall, the SBA provides management and 
technical assistance training to over 100,000 veterans annually.5 
Also, as will be discussed, the SBAExpress loan program waives fees for veterans as a means to 
enhance veterans’ access to capital. The SBA’s Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loan 
(MREIDL) program is also of interest to veterans; it provides direct loans of up to $2 million to 
small business owners who are not able to obtain credit elsewhere to meet ordinary and necessary 
operating expenses that they could have met but are not able to meet because an essential 
employee (including the owner) has been called up to active duty in his or her role as a military 
reservist or member of the National Guard due to a period of military conflict.6  
This report opens with an examination of veteran-owned businesses’ economic circumstances, 
comparing unemployment and labor force participation rates for veterans, veterans who have left 
the military since September 2001, and nonveterans. The report also describes employment 
assistance programs offered by several federal agencies to assist veterans transitioning from the 
military to the civilian labor force and examines, in greater detail, the SBA’s veteran business 
development programs, the SBA’s efforts to enhance veterans’ access to capital, and the SBA’s 
SDVOSB contracting program.  
An Economic Profile of Veteran-Owned Businesses 
The Annual Business Survey (ABS) is conducted jointly by the U.S. Census Bureau and the 
National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics within the National Science Foundation. 
The ABS provides information on selected economic and demographic characteristics for 
nonfarm employer businesses and business owners by gender, ethnicity, race, and veteran status.7 
ABS data concerning veteran-owned businesses are provided below. 
In addition, the Census Bureau’s annual Nonemployer Statistics by Demographic (NES-D) data 
series uses existing administrative and census records to assign demographic characteristics, 
including veteran status, to the 28.56 million nonemployer businesses in the United States. In 
2018 (the latest available data), about 1.62 million nonemployer businesses in the United States 
are owned by veterans.8  
                                                 
5 SBA, “FY2023 Congressional Budget Justification FY2021 Annual Performance Report,” pp. 91-94, at 
https://www.sba.gov/document/report-congressional-budget-justification-annual-performance-report.  
6 SBA, “Disaster Assistance Program: SOP 50-30-9,” May 31, 2018, p. 69, at https://www.sba.gov/document/sop-50-
30-9-disaster-assistance-program-posted-05-31; and 13 C.F.R. §123.508. For further information and analysis 
concerning the SBA’s disaster assistance loan program, see CRS Report R41309, The SBA Disaster Loan Program: 
Overview and Possible Issues for Congress, by Bruce R. Lindsay. 
7 U.S. Bureau of the Census, “About the Annual Business Survey (ABS),” at https://www.census.gov/programs-
surveys/abs/about.html. The ABS collected data electronically from approximately 850,000 employer businesses in 
2017, and approximately 300,000 employer businesses annually in years 2018-2021. Businesses selected for the survey 
receive an initial letter informing them of their requirement to complete the survey. The sample is stratified by state, 
frame, and industry and is systematically sampled within each stratum. It used a standard type of estimation for 
stratified systematic sampling. 
8 In 2018 (the latest available data), veteran-owned nonemployer businesses in the United States accounted for about 
5.7% of all nonemployer businesses (1.62 million of 28.56 million). See Bureau of the Census, “Nonemployer 
Statistics by Demographics series (NES-D): Owner Characteristics of Nonemployer Firms by Sector, Sex, Ethnicity, 
Race, and Veteran Status for the U.S., States, and Metro Areas: 2018,” at 
https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?q=ab1800%2a&tid=ABSNESDO2018.AB1800NESD04&nkd=OWNER_VET~00
0%3A002%3A004. 
A nonemployer business has “no paid employment or payroll, with annual receipts of $1,000 or more ($1 or more in 
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Demographics 
The ABS estimates that in 2019 about 5.7% (331,151 of 5,771,292) of nonfarm employer 
businesses in the United States were owned by veterans.9 Of these businesses 
  94.8% were male-owned, 4.4% were female-owned, and 0.8% were owned 
equally by a male and a female.  
 
Veteran-owned nonfarm employer businesses were more likely than other 
nonfarm employer businesses in 2019 to be owned by a male. The comparable 
national figures for 2019 are 63.1% were owned by a male (compared to 94.8% 
for veterans), 21.7% were owned by a female (compared to 4.4% for veterans), 
and 15.2% were owned equally by a male and a female (compared to 0.8% for 
veterans).10 
  10.0% were minority-owned, 0.2% were equally nonminority-owned and 
minority-owned, and 89.8% were nonminority-owned.  
 
Veteran-owned nonfarm employer businesses were more likely than other 
nonfarm employer businesses to be nonminority-owned in 2019. The comparable 
national figures for 2019 are 19.4% were minority-owned (compared to 10.0% 
for veterans), 1.6% were equally nonminority-owned and minority-owned 
(compared to 0.2% for veterans), and 79.0% were nonminority-owned (compared 
to 89.8% for veterans).11 
In addition, in 2019, 99.8% (330,535) of veteran-owned nonfarm employer businesses had fewer 
than 500 employees and 0.2% (614) had at least 500 employees. This ratio is similar to 
comparable national figures for 2019, according to which 99.6% (5,751,034) of nonfarm 
employer businesses had fewer than 500 employees and 0.4% (20,256) had at least 500 
employees.12 
Employment, Payroll, and Sales/Receipts 
The ABS estimates that in 2019, veteran-owned nonfarm employer businesses  
  employed nearly 4.0 million persons (about 3.1% of total U.S. employment from 
nonfarm employer businesses);  
                                                 
the construction industries), and filing tax forms for sole proprietorships (Form 1040, Schedule C), partnerships (Form 
1065), or corporations (the Form 1120 series). The vast majority of nonemployer businesses are sole proprietors.” See 
U.S. Census Bureau, Adela Luque, Michaela Dillion, Julia Manzella, James Noon, Kevin Rinz, and Victoria Udalova, 
“Nonemployer Statistics by Demographics (NES-D): Exploring Longitudinal Consistency and Sub-national Estimates,” 
December 2019, pp. 5, 6, at https://www.census.gov/library/working-papers/2019/adrm/ces-wp-19-34.html (hereinafter 
Adela Luque et al., NES-D). 
9 U.S. Bureau of the Census, “Annual Business Survey: Statistics for Employer Firms by Industry, Sex, Ethnicity, Race 
and Veteran Status for the U.S., States, and Metro Areas: 2019,” at 
https://data.census.gov/cedsci/table?tid=ABSCS2019.AB1900CSA01&hidePreview=true (hereinafter Bureau of the 
Census, “Annual Business Survey by Industry, Sex, Ethnicity, Race and Veteran”). 
10 Bureau of the Census, “Annual Business Survey by Industry, Sex, Ethnicity, Race and Veteran.” 
11 Bureau of the Census, “Annual Business Survey by Industry, Sex, Ethnicity, Race and Veteran.” 
12 Bureau of the Census, “Annual Business Survey: Employment Size of Firm Statistics for Employer Firms by Sector, 
Sex, Ethnicity, Race, and Veteran Status for the U.S., States and Metro Areas: 2019,” at https://data.census.gov/cedsci/
table?tid=ABSCS2019.AB1900CSA04&hidePreview=true. 
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  had a total payroll of $191.6 billion (about 2.6% of total U.S. payroll from 
nonfarm employer businesses); and  
  generated more than $963.4 billion in total sales/receipts (about 2.4% of total 
U.S. receipts from nonfarm employer businesses).13 
Veterans’ Employment Data 
The Department of Labor’s Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) provides monthly updates of the 
employment status of the nation’s veterans. The BLS reports that as of April 2022, there were 
about 18.4 million veterans.14 There were over 8.9 million veterans in the civilian labor force (i.e., 
they were either employed or unemployed and available for work, except for temporary illness, 
and had made specific efforts to find employment sometime during the four-week period ending 
with the reference week). Of those veterans in the civilian labor force, 8.65 million were 
employed and about 260,000 were unemployed.15 
In recent years, the unemployment rate among veterans as a whole has generally been lower than 
the unemployment rate for nonveterans 18 years and older. However, veterans who have left the 
military since September 2001 have experienced higher unemployment than other veterans and, 
in some years, higher than nonveterans as well. In April 2022, the unemployment rate for 
nonveterans 18 years and older was 3.3%, which was higher than veterans as a whole (2.9%), 
higher than veterans who left the military prior to September 2001 (2.7%), and lower than 
veterans who left the military since September 2001 (3.4%).16 
Veterans who have left the military since September 2001 also have a higher labor force 
participation rate (80.2%) than other veterans (36.0%) and nonveterans aged 18 and older 
(64.5%).17 The higher labor force participation rate for veterans who left the military since 
September 2001 was not wholly unexpected. They entered the civilian workforce more recently 
and have had less time to develop a reason (e.g., health issue, family responsibility, 
discouragement, retirement) to withdraw from the civilian workforce than other veterans and 
nonveterans aged 18 and older. 
The lower labor force participation rate for other veterans was also not wholly unexpected. They 
entered the civilian workforce earlier and have had more time to develop a reason to withdraw 
from the civilian workforce than veterans who left the military since September 2001 and 
nonveterans aged 18 and older.18 
                                                 
13 Bureau of the Census, “Annual Business Survey by Industry, Sex, Ethnicity, Race and Veteran.” In 2017, veteran-
owned nonemployer businesses generated $59.3 billion in total sales/receipts (about 5.0% of total U.S. receipts from 
nonemployer businesses). See Bureau of the Census, “Annual Business Survey: Employment Size of Firm Statistics for 
Employer Firms by Sector, Sex, Ethnicity, Race, and Veteran Status for the U.S., States and Metro Areas: 2018,” at 
https://www2.census.gov/programs-surveys/abs/data/2017/nesd_estimates_2017_Table1.xlsx. 
14 DOL, Bureau of Labor Statistics, “Table A-5. Employment status of the civilian population 18 years and over by 
veteran status, period of service, and sex, not seasonally adjusted,” at https://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t05.htm 
(hereinafter DOL, Table A-5). 
15 DOL, Table A-5. 
16 DOL, Table A-5. 
17 DOL, Table A-5. 
18 A report by the Council of Economic Advisers and the National Economic Council attributed lower labor force 
participation for veterans to several factors, including the difficulty many civilian employers have in understanding a 
military resume and how military job titles translate into civilian job skills, the presence of a service-connected 
disability, especially among the post-9/11 veteran population, and the number of post-9/11 veterans (about 217,000) 
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Veterans’ Employment and Business 
Development Programs 
Several federal agencies, including the SBA, sponsor employment and business development 
programs to assist veterans in their transition from the military into the civilian labor force. As 
discussed, the expansion of federal employment and business development training programs 
targeted at specific populations, such as women and veterans, has led some Members and 
organizations to ask if these programs should be consolidated. Others question if the level of 
communication and coordination among federal agencies administering these programs has been 
sufficient to ensure the programs are being administered in the most efficient and effective 
manner. 
SBA’s Office of Veterans Business Development 
In an effort to assist veteran entrepreneurs, the SBA has either provided or supported management 
and technical assistance training for VOSBs since its formation as an agency.19 As mentioned, the 
SBA’s OVBD, statutorily authorized by P.L. 106-50, the Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small 
Business Development Act of 1999, serves as the SBA’s focal point for veteran assistance 
programs. The act addressed congressional concerns that the United States generally, and the SBA 
in particular, was not, at that time, doing enough to meet the needs of veteran entrepreneurs, 
especially service-disabled veteran entrepreneurs.20 At the time, several Members of Congress 
argued that “the needs of veterans have been diminished systematically at the SBA,” as evidenced 
by the agency’s elimination of direct loans, including direct loans to veterans, in 1995, and a 
decline in the SBA’s “training and counseling for veterans … from 38,775 total counseling 
sessions for veterans in 1993 to 29,821 sessions in 1998.”21 To address these concerns, the act 
authorized the establishment of the federally chartered National Veterans Business Development 
Corporation (known as the Veterans Corporation and reconstituted, without a federal charter, in 
2012 as Veteranscorp.org).22 Its mission is to 
(1)  expand  the  provision  of  and  improve  access  to  technical  assistance  regarding 
entrepreneurship for the Nation’s veterans; and (2) to assist veterans, including service-
disabled veterans, with the formation and expansion of small business concerns by working 
with and organizing public and private resources, including those of the Small Business 
Administration,  the  Department  of  Veterans  Affairs,  the  Department  of  Labor,  the 
Department  of  Commerce,  the  Department  of  Defense,  the  Service  Corps  of  Retired 
                                                 
who have been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. See Executive Office of the President, Council of 
Economic Advisers and the National Economic Council, “Military Skills for America’s Future: Leveraging Military 
Service and Experience to Put Veterans and Military Spouses Back to Work,” May 31, 2012, pp. 4-6, at 
https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/sites/default/files/docs/veterans_report_5-31-2012.pdf. 
19 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Banking and Currency, Extension of the Small Business Act of 1953, report to 
accompany S. 2127, 84th Cong., 1st sess., July 22, 1955, S.Rept. 84-1350 (Washington: GPO, 1955), p. 17. 
20 P.L. 106-50, the Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999, Section 101. Findings. 
21 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development 
Act of 1999, report to accompany H.R. 1568, 106th Cong., 1st sess., June 29, 1999, H.Rept. 106-206 (Washington: GPO, 
1999), pp. 14-15 (hereinafter U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Veterans Entrepreneurship and 
Small Business Development Act of 1999). 
22 Veteranscorp, “About Us,” Oxford, MD at http://www.veteranscorp.org/2012/01/a-new-veteranscorp-org-gets-the-
chance-to-help-veteran-entrepreneurs-2/. 
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Executives…, the Small Business Development Centers…, and the business development 
staffs of each department and agency of the United States.23 
P.L. 106-50 reemphasized the SBA’s responsibility “to reach out to and include veterans in its 
programs providing financial and technical assistance.”24 It included veterans as a target group for 
the SBA’s 7(a), 504 Certified Development Company (504/CDC), and Microloan lending 
programs. It also required the SBA to enter into a memorandum of understanding with SCORE 
to, among other things, establish “a program to coordinate counseling and training regarding 
entrepreneurship to veterans through the chapters of SCORE throughout the United States.”25 In 
addition, it directed the SBA to enter into a memorandum of understanding with small business 
development centers, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the National Veterans Business 
Development Corporation “with respect to entrepreneurial assistance to veterans, including 
service-disabled veterans.”26 The act specified that the following services were to be provided: 
(1) Conducting of studies and research, and the distribution of information generated by 
such  studies  and  research,  on  the  formation,  management,  financing,  marketing,  and 
operation of small business concerns by veterans. 
(2)  Provision  of  training  and  counseling  to  veterans  concerning  the  formation, 
management, financing, marketing, and operation of small business concerns. 
(3) Provision of management and technical assistance to the owners and operators of small 
business  concerns  regarding  international  markets,  the  promotion  of  exports,  and  the 
transfer of technology. 
(4)  Provision  of  assistance  and  information  to  veterans  regarding  procurement 
opportunities with Federal, State, and local agencies, especially such agencies funded in 
whole or in part with Federal funds. 
(5)  Establishment  of  an  information  clearinghouse  to  collect  and distribute  information, 
including  by  electronic  means,  on  the  assistance  programs  of  Federal,  State,  and  local 
governments,  and  of  the  private  sector,  including  information  on  office  locations,  key 
personnel,  telephone  numbers,  mail  and  electronic  addresses,  and  contracting  and 
subcontracting opportunities. 
(6)  Provision  of  Internet  or  other  distance  learning  academic  instruction  for  veterans  in 
business subjects, including accounting, marketing, and business fundamentals. 
(7)  Compilation  of  a  list  of  small  business  concerns  owned  and  controlled  by  service-
disabled veterans that provide products or services that could be procured by the United 
States and delivery of such list to each department and agency of the United States. Such 
list  shall  be  delivered  in  hard  copy  and  electronic  form  and  shall  include  the  name  and 
address of each such small business concern and the products or services that it provides.27 
The SBA’s OVBD addressed these statutory requirements by promoting “veterans’ small 
business ownership by conducting comprehensive outreach, through program and policy 
development and implementation, ombudsman support, coordinated agency initiatives, and direct 
                                                 
23 P.L. 106-50, the Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999, Section 33. National 
Veterans Business Development Corporation. Also, see 15 U.S.C. §657c. 
24 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development 
Act of 1999, p. 14. 
25 P.L. 106-50, Section 301. Score Program. 
26 P.L. 106-50, Section 302. Entrepreneurial Assistance. 
27 P.L. 106-50, Section 302. Entrepreneurial Assistance. 
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assistance to veterans, service-disabled veterans, reserve and National Guard members, and 
discharging active duty service members and their families.”28 
OVBD Outreach Funding 
As shown in Table 1, the SBA’s OVBD’s appropriation for outreach activities generally has 
increased in recent years. In FY2022, OVBD received an appropriation of $16.0 million for 
outreach activities.  
Table 1. SBA Office of Veteran’s Business Development Veterans Outreach 
Appropriation, FY2015-FY2022 
($ in millions) 
FY 
Appropriation 
Actual Expenditures 
2022  
$16.000 
NA 
2021 
$14.000 
$13.832 
2020 
$14.000 
$14.622 
2019 
$12.700 
$12.224 
2018 
$12.300 
$12.558 
2017 
$12.300 
$12.572 
2016 
$12.300 
$12.808 
2015 
$10.500 
$10.733 
Source: U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), “FY2016 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2014 
Annual Performance Report,” p. 21, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2018-06/Fiscal%20year%202016.zip; 
SBA, “FY2017 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2015 Annual Performance Report,” p. 19, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2018-06/Fiscal%20year%202017.zip; SBA, “FY2018 Congressional Budget 
Justification and FY2016 Annual Performance Report,” p. 12, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2018-06/
Fiscal%20year%202018.zip; SBA, “FY2019 Congressional Justification and FY2017 Annual Performance Report,” 
p. 12, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2018-06/Fiscal%20year%202019.zip; SBA, “FY2020 Congressional 
Justification and FY2018 Annual Performance Report,” p. 11, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2019-04/
SBA%20FY%202020%20Congressional%20Justification_final%20508%20%204%2023%202019.pdf; SBA, “FY2021 
Congressional Justification and FY2019 Annual Performance Report,” p. 11, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/
files/2020-02/FY%202021%20CJ-508_FINAL.pdf; SBA, “FY2022 Congressional Justification and FY2020 Annual 
Performance Report,” p. 13, at https://www.sba.gov/document/report-congressional-budget-justification-annual-
performance-report; Rep. Rosa DeLauro, “Explanatory Statement Submitted by Mrs. DeLauro, Chairwoman of 
the House Committee on Appropriations Regarding H.R. 2471, Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2022 (Division 
E – Financial Services and General Government Appropriations Act, 2022),” 117th Cong., 2nd sess., March 9, 
2022, p. 53, at http://docs.house.gov/billsthisweek/20220307/BILLS-117RCP35-JES-DIVISION-E.pdf; and SBA, 
“FY2023 Congressional Budget Justification FY2021 Annual Performance Report,” p. 14, at https://www.sba.gov/
document/report-congressional-budget-justification-annual-performance-report. 
                                                 
28 SBA, “FY2013 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2011 Annual Performance Report,” p. 62, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/FY%202015%20CBJ%20FY%202013%20APR%20FINAL%
20508(1).pdf. 
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OVBD Outreach Programs 
As mentioned, the OVBD provides, or supports third parties to provide, management and 
technical assistance training services to more than 100,000 veterans each year. These services are 
provided  
through funded SBA district office outreach; OVBD-developed and distributed materials; 
websites; partnering with DOD [Department of Defense], DOL [Department of Labor] and 
universities; agreements with regional veterans business outreach centers; direct guidance, 
training and assistance to Agency veteran customers; and through enhancements to intra-
agency programs used by the military and veteran communities.29 
The SBA’s OVBD’s outreach programs include 
  the Entrepreneurship Bootcamp for Veterans with Disabilities Consortium of 
Universities, which provides “experiential training in entrepreneurship and small 
business management to post-9/11 veterans with disabilities” at eight 
universities;30 
  the Veteran Women Igniting the Spirit of Entrepreneurship (V-WISE) program, 
administered through a cooperative agreement with Syracuse University, which 
offers women veterans a 15-day, online course focused on entrepreneurship skills 
and the “language of business,” followed by a 3-day conference (offered twice a 
year at varying locations) in which participants “are exposed to successful 
entrepreneurs and CEOs of Fortune 500 companies and leaders in government” 
and participate in courses on business planning, marketing, accounting and 
finance, operations and production, human resources, and work-life balance;31 
  the Operation Endure and Grow Program, administered through a cooperative 
agreement with Syracuse University, which offers an eight-week online training 
program “focused on the fundamentals of launching and/or growing a small 
business” and is available to National Guard members and reservists and their 
family members;32 
  the Boots to Business initiative, which is “an elective track within the 
Department of Defense’s revised Training Assistance Program called Transition 
Goals, Plans, Success (Transition GPS) and has three parts: the Entrepreneurship 
Track Overview—a 10-minute introductory video shown during the mandatory 
five-day Transition GPS course, which introduces entrepreneurship as a post-
service career option; Introduction to Entrepreneurship—a two-day classroom 
course on entrepreneurship and business fundamentals offered as one of the three 
Transition GPS elective tracks; and Foundations of Entrepreneurship—an eight-
week, instructor-led online course that offers in-depth instruction on the elements 
of a business plan and tips and techniques for starting a business”;33  
                                                 
29 SBA, “FY2013 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2011 Annual Performance Report,” p. 62, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/1-
508%20Compliant%20FY%202013%20CBJ%20FY%202011%20APR(1).pdf. 
30 Syracuse University, “About the EBV,” Syracuse, NY, at http://whitman.syr.edu/ebv/about/. 
31 Syracuse University, “Women Veterans Igniting the Spirit of Entrepreneurship (V-WISE),” Syracuse, NY, at 
http://vwise.vets.syr.edu/vwise. 
32 Syracuse University, “About Operation Endure and Grow,” Syracuse, NY, at http://vets.syr.edu/education/endure-
grow/. 
33 SBA, “Operation Boots to Business: From Service to Startup,” at https://www.sba.gov/offices/headquarters/ovbd/
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  the Boots to Business: Reboot initiative, which expanded the Boots to Business 
initiative in 2014 to include veterans of all eras, active duty servicemembers 
(including National Guard and Reserves), and their partners/spouses;  
  the Veterans Institute for Procurement (VIP) program, which is designed to 
increase the ability of veteran-owned businesses to win government contracts by 
providing “an accelerator-like, in-residence educational training program for 
owners, principals, and executives of veteran-owned businesses, consisting of a 
three-day comprehensive certification program instructed by professional service 
experts, government officials, and agency representatives”;34 and 
  the VBOC program, which provides veterans and their spouses management and 
technical assistance training at 22 locations, including assistance with the Boots 
to Business initiatives, the development and maintenance of a five-year business 
plan, and referrals to other SBA resource partners when appropriate for additional 
training or mentoring services.35 
The SBA also continues to work closely with the Interagency Task Force for Veterans Small 
Business Development, which was established by executive order on April 26, 2010, held its first 
public meeting on October 15, 2010, and issued its first report on November 1, 2011, to identify 
“gaps in ensuring that transitioning military members who are interested in owning a small 
business get needed assistance and training.”36 The task force’s second report, issued on 
November 29, 2012, focused on progress made since the initial report.37 The task force continues 
                                                 
resources/160511; SBA, “Operation Boots to Business: Fact Sheet,” at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/
B2B_Fact%20Sheet.pdf; and SBA, “SBA Awards Funding to Nonprofit Organizations Providing “Boots to Business” 
Entrepreneurship Training,” at https://www.sba.gov/about-sba/sba-newsroom/press-releases-media-advisories/sba-
awards-funding-nonprofit-organizations-providing-boots-business-entrepreneurship-training. 
34 SBA, “FY2018 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2016 Annual Performance Report,” p. 98, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/aboutsbaarticle/FINAL_SBA_FY_2018_CBJ_May_22_2017c.pdf. 
35 SBA, Office of Veterans Business Development, “Veterans Business Outreach Center (VBOC) Program,” at 
https://www.sba.gov/page/veterans-business-outreach-center-vboc-program.  
VBOC grants, typically ranging from $150,000 to $400,000 annually, may be renewed each year at the SBA’s 
discretion for an additional four years subject to continuing program authority, the availability of funds, and the 
recipient’s continued satisfactory performance and compliance with program requirements. See SBA, Office of 
Veterans Business Development, “Veterans Business Outreach Center Program: FY2018 Funding Opportunity No. 
VBOC-2018-01,” p. 5, at https://www.grants.gov/web/grants/search-grants.html?keywords=SB-OWB-21-001; and 
SBA, Office of Veterans Business Development, “Veterans Business Outreach Center Program: Initial Phase Grant, 
Notice of Funding Opportunity: VBOC-2021-01,” pp. 2-5, at https://www.grantsolutions.gov/gs/preaward/
previewPublicAnnouncement.do?id=92281. 
36 SBA, Office of Veterans Business Development, “Interagency Task Force,” at https://www.sba.gov/offices/
headquarters/ovbd/resources/14372; and The Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development, 
“Report to the President: Empowering Veterans Through Entrepreneurship,” November 1, 2011, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/FY2012-Final%20Veterans%20TF%20Report%20to%20President.pdf. 
37 The Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development, “Heroes on the Home Front: Supporting 
Veteran Success as Small Business Owners,” November 29, 2012, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/
Veterans_Report_FINAL.pdf. The Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development includes senior-
level representatives of the SBA, the Departments of Defense, Labor, Treasury, and Veterans Affairs, the General 
Services Administration, the Office of Management and Budget, and four representatives from veterans’ service or 
military organizations appointed by the SBA administrator. SBA Acting Associate Administrator Barbara Carson 
serves as its chair. See Executive Order 13540, “Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development,” 75 
Federal Register 22497-22498, April 29, 2010; and U.S. Small Business Administration, “Inter-Agency Task Force on 
Veterans Small Business Development: Kick Off Meeting Wednesday, September 15, 2010,” at https://www.sba.gov/
offices/headquarters/ovbd/resources/14368. 
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to meet on a quarterly basis to foster communication and monitor agency progress in assisting 
transitioning servicemembers. 
VBOCs and the Boots to Business Initiative 
The OVBD’s two largest management and technical assistance training programs are the VBOC 
program and the Boots to Business initiative. As shown in Table 2, in FY2021, 58,762 veterans 
received management and technical assistance from a VBOC and 20,414 veterans participated in 
the Boots to Business initiative. 
Table 2. Veterans Business Outreach Centers and Boots to Business Initiative, 
Number of Clients and Participants, FY2013-FY2021 
Number of Veterans Business 
Number of Boots to Business 
FY 
Outreach Center Clients 
Initiative Participants 
2021 
58,762 
20,414 
2020 
46,025 
21,799 
2019 
41,860 
16,528 
2018 
51,945 
17,167 
2017 
48,839 
17,320 
2016 
47,342 
17,966 
2015 
62,117 
14,457 
2014 
78,124 
14,684 
2013 
73,062 
4,514 
Sources: SBA, “FY2020 Congressional Justification and FY2018 Annual Performance Report,” p. 96, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2019-04/
SBA%20FY%202020%20Congressional%20Justification_final%20508%20%204%2023%202019.pdf; SBA, “FY2021 
Congressional Justification and FY2019 Annual Performance Report,” pp. 94, 95, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/
default/files/2020-02/FY%202021%20CJ-508_FINAL.pdf; SBA, “FY2022 Congressional Justification and FY2020 
Annual Performance Report,” pp. 90, 92, at https://www.sba.gov/document/report-congressional-budget-
justification-annual-performance-report; and SBA, “FY2023 Congressional Budget Justification FY2021 Annual 
Performance Report,” p. 94, at https://www.sba.gov/document/report-congressional-budget-justification-annual-
performance-report. 
The VBOC program’s origin can be traced to P.L. 105-135, the Small Business Reauthorization 
Act of 1997, which directed the SBA to “develop and implement a program of comprehensive 
outreach to assist eligible veterans, which program shall include business training and 
management assistance, employment and relocation counseling, and dissemination of information 
on veterans’ benefits and veterans’ entitlements.” The program awarded its first outreach center 
grants to four organizations in September 1999.38 
                                                 
38 The four organizations were the University of Texas-Pan American, TEP Consulting, Inc., the University of West 
Florida (Veterans Business Outreach Center, Lynn Haven, Florida), and the Research Foundation of the State 
University of New York. See U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Hearing with Respect to SBA 
Programs for Veterans and the National Veterans Development Corporation, hearing, 107th Cong., 1st sess., May 23, 
2001, Serial No. 107-10 (Washington: GPO, 2001), p. 38; and SBA, “Award Notice for the Veterans Business 
Outreach Program Under Program,” 64 Federal Register 50547, September 17, 1999.  
Prior to the VBOC program, the SBA’s Veterans Entrepreneurial Training (VET) Program, established on a pilot basis 
in 1986, provided grants to nonprofit organizations (such as SCORE, Veteran Business Resource Councils, and 
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SBA Veterans Assistance Programs: An Analysis of Contemporary Issues 
 
The Operation Boots to Business: From Service to Startup initiative for transitioning 
servicemembers started as a partnership between the SBA’s OVBD and Syracuse University in 
July 2012. The initiative became fully operational in February 2014.39 The program consists of a 
two-day introductory course on entrepreneurship followed by an eight-week, online course to 
prepare servicemembers and military spouses “for post-service career success as business 
owners.”40 
Congress provided the SBA $7 million in FY2014 and $7.5 million in FY2015 to expand the 
Boots to Business initiative “nationwide to the 250,000 yearly transitioning servicemembers in all 
branches of the military.”41 Since then, funding for the initiative has been provided through the 
appropriation for the OVBD’s outreach activities. 
The initiative’s two-day Introduction to Entrepreneurship course is now offered at more than 160 
military institutions worldwide and is “a standard portion of the curricula offered at the revised 
Transition Assistance Program (TAP) to servicemembers.”42 TAP is administered by the 
Department of Defense (DOD) in cooperation with the Department of Labor (DOL), Department 
                                                 
Chambers of Commerce) to make arrangements with community colleges and technological institutes to provide 
management and technical assistance, typically lasting at least six months, to veterans interested in starting a business. 
See U.S. Congress, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Subcommittee on Education, Training and Employment, 
H.R. 1404-The Veterans Entrepreneurship Promotion Act of 1991, hearing, 102nd Cong., 1st sess., May 15, 1991, Serial 
Number 102-14 (Washington: GPO, 1991), pp. 3, 4, 109, 110; and U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small 
Business, Subcommittee on Government Programs, and House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Subcommittee on 
Education, Training, Employment, and Housing, SBA Programs to Assist Veterans in Readjusting to Civilian Life, joint 
hearing, 104th Cong., 2nd sess., July 31, 1996, Serial Number 104-91 (Washington: GPO, 1996), pp. 11-13, 33-41, 49-
56, 94-98. 
39 SBA, Office of Inspector General, The Small Business Administration’s Boots to Business Program, Report Number 
18-20, July 19, 2018, p. 1, at https://www.sba.gov/document/report-18-20-small-business-administrations-boots-
business-program. 
Prior to the Boots to Business Initiative, the SBA had participated in the Department of Defense’s Transitional 
Assistance Program on a somewhat less formal basis since the 1980s. See U.S. Congress, House Committee on 
Veterans’ Affairs, Subcommittee on Education, Training and Employment, H.R. 1404-The Veterans Entrepreneurship 
Promotion Act of 1991, hearing, 102nd Cong., 1st sess., May 15, 1991, Serial Number 102-14 (Washington: GPO, 
1991), pp. 3, 4, 108-110; and U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Subcommittee on Government 
Programs, and House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Subcommittee on Education, Training, Employment, and 
Housing, SBA Programs to Assist Veterans in Readjusting to Civilian Life, joint hearing, 104th Cong., 2nd sess., July 31, 
1996, Serial Number 104-91 (Washington: GPO, 1996), pp. 11-13, 33-41, 49-56, 94-98. 
40 SBA, “Operation Boots to Business: From Service to Startup,” at http://www.sba.gov/bootstobusiness; and Institute 
for Veterans and Military Families, Syracuse University, “White Paper: Operation Boots to Business Veteran 
Entrepreneurship Assessment,” June 2016, p. 2, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
b2b_vet_entrepreneurship_assessment.pdf. The eight-week, online course provides instruction on the “elements of a 
business plan, evaluating venture ideas, identifying components of business venture strategies and interrelations of 
marketing, accounting/finance, operations/production, and human resources.” See Institute for Veterans and Military 
Families, Syracuse University, “White Paper: Operation Boots to Business Veteran Entrepreneurship Assessment,” 
June 2016, p. 15.  
41 SBA, “FY2014 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2012 Annual Performance Report,” p. 52, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/1-508-Compliant-FY-2014-CBJ%20FY%202012%20APR.pdf. 
Recommended FY2014 funding levels for the SBA’s noncredit programs are in the Explanatory Statement 
accompanying the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (Division E-Financial Services and General Government 
Appropriations Act, 2014), pp. 37-39, at http://docs.house.gov/billsthisweek/20140113/113-HR3547-JSOM-D-F.pdf. 
42 Institute for Veterans and Military Families, Syracuse University, “White Paper: Operation Boots to Business 
Veteran Entrepreneurship Assessment,” June 2016, p. 13, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
b2b_vet_entrepreneurship_assessment.pdf.  
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of Veterans Affairs (VA), Department of Education (DOE), Department of Homeland Security 
(DHS), Office of Personnel Management (OPM), and SBA.43 
During the 114th Congress, legislation was introduced and reported favorably by the Senate 
Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship to provide the Boots to Business initiative 
statutory authorization (S. 1866, the Veterans Small Business Ownership Improvements Act of 
2015). Similar legislation was introduced during the 115th Congress (S. 121, the Veterans Small 
Business Ownership Improvements Act, and H.R. 5193, the Veteran Entrepreneurship Training 
Act of 2018), the 116th Congress (H.R. 3537, the Veteran Entrepreneurship Training Act of 2019), 
and the 117th Congress (H.R. 3469, to amend the Small Business Act to Codify the Boots to 
Business Program, and for other purposes). 
Congressional Issues: Duplication of Services 
The expansion of the SBA’s veteran outreach efforts has led some Members and organizations to 
ask if the nation’s veterans might be better served if some of the veteran employment and 
business development programs offered by federal agencies were consolidated. For example, as 
mentioned, DOD, in cooperation with several federal agencies, operates the recently revised 
Transition Assistance Program, Transition GPS, which provides employment information and 
training to exiting servicemembers to assist them in transitioning from the military into the 
civilian labor force. In addition, DOL’s Jobs for Veterans State Grants program provides states 
funding for Disabled Veterans’ Outreach Program specialists and Local Veterans’ Employment 
Representatives to provide outreach and assistance to veterans, and their spouses, seeking 
employment.44 DOL also administers the Veterans Workforce Investment Program, which 
provides grants to fund programs operated by eligible state and local government workforce 
investment boards, state and local government agencies, and private nonprofit organizations to 
provide various services designed to assist veterans’ transitions into the civilian labor force.45 The 
DOL-administered Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program provides grants to fund programs 
operated by eligible state and local government workforce investment boards, state and local 
government agencies, and private nonprofit organizations that provide various services designed 
to assist homeless veterans achieve meaningful employment and to aid in the development of a 
service delivery system to address problems facing homeless veterans.46 
Advocates of consolidating veteran employment and business development programs argue that 
eliminating program duplication among federal agencies would result in lower costs and 
                                                 
43 The Department of Defense introduced a redesigned curriculum for the TAP program, called the Transition Goals 
Plans Success pilot program (Transition GPS), at seven military bases in summer 2012. Transition GPS is now offered 
nationwide. It includes a five-day core program intended to ensure servicemembers are “career ready” when they leave 
military service. The core curriculum includes the following modules: pre-separation counseling (4 hours), Department 
of Veterans Affairs benefits (6 hours), employment workshop (24 hours), financial planning (4 hours), resilient 
transition (1 hour), and a crosswalk between military and civilian skills that includes a “skills gap” analysis (2 hours). 
Transition GPS is mandatory for nearly all exiting servicemembers. See U.S. Department of Defense, “Turbo Tap,” at 
http://www.turbotap.org/register.tpp. 
44 For information on the Disabled Veterans’ Outreach Program and Local Veterans’ Employment Representatives 
Program, see DOL, “Jobs for Veterans State Grants,” at http://www.dol.gov/vets/grants/state/jvsg.htm. 
45 For further information and analysis of federal programs outside of the SBA that are designed to assist veterans 
seeking civilian employment, see CRS Report R42790, Employment for Veterans: Trends and Programs, coordinated 
by Benjamin Collins. 
46 For further information and analysis concerning the Homeless Veterans Reintegration Program, see CRS Report 
RL34024, Veterans and Homelessness, by Libby Perl. 
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improved services. For example, H.R. 4072, the Consolidating Veteran Employment Services for 
Improved Performance Act of 2012, which was introduced during the 112th Congress and ordered 
to be reported by the House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs on April 27, 2012, would have 
transferred several veteran employment training programs from the DOL to the VA.47 
In addition, in 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, and 2015, the House Committee on Small Business, in its 
“Views and Estimates” letter to the House Committee on the Budget, recommended that funding 
for the SBA’s VBOCs be either eliminated or transferred to the Department of Veterans Affairs 
because, as it stated in 2012, “the SBA already provides significant assistance to veterans who are 
seeking to start or already operate small businesses. The VBOCs duplicate services already 
available from the SBA, other entrepreneurial development partners and programs available from 
the Department of Veterans Affairs.”48 In 2014, the House Committee on Small Business also 
recommended that if additional funds were to be provided to VBOCs, those funds should come 
from the SBA’s Boots to Business initiative. 
Advocates of consolidating federal veteran employment and business development programs cite 
U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) reports that have characterized the broader 
category of federal support for entrepreneurs, including veteran entrepreneurs, as fragmented and 
having overlapping missions. For example, in 2012, GAO identified 53 programs within the SBA 
and the Departments of Commerce, Housing and Urban Development, and Agriculture designed 
to support entrepreneurs, including 36 programs that provide entrepreneurs technical assistance, 
such as business training, counseling, and research and development support. GAO found that 
“the overlap among these programs raise[s] questions about whether a fragmented system is the 
most effective way to support entrepreneurs” and suggested agencies should “determine whether 
there are more efficient ways to continue to serve the unique needs of entrepreneurs, including 
consolidating programs.”49 
Instead of consolidating programs, some argue that improved communication and cooperation 
among the federal agencies providing entrepreneur support programs, and among the SBA’s 
management and technical assistance training resource partners, would enhance program 
efficiencies while preserving the ability of these programs to offer services that match the unique 
                                                 
47 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, “Debunking the Myths: H.R. 4072,” at 
http://veterans.house.gov/4072. 
48 U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Small Business, “Views and Estimates of the Committee on Small 
Business on Matters to be set forth in the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2012,” March 17, 2011, 
at http://smallbusiness.house.gov/uploadedfiles/march_17_views_and_estimates_letter.pdf. Also, see U.S. House of 
Representatives, Committee on Small Business, “Views and Estimates of the Committee on Small Business on Matters 
to be set forth in the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2013,” March 7, 2012, at 
http://smallbusiness.house.gov/uploadedfiles/views_and_estimates_fy_2013.pdf; U.S. House of Representatives, 
Committee on Small Business, “Views and Estimates of the Committee on Small Business on Matters to be set forth in 
the Concurrent Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2014,” February 27, 2013, at http://smallbusiness.house.gov/
uploadedfiles/revised_2014_views_and_estimates_document.pdf; U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on Small 
Business, “Views and Estimates of the Committee on Small Business on Matters to be set forth in the Concurrent 
Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2015,” March 25, 2014, at http://smallbusiness.house.gov/uploadedfiles/3-25-
2014_revised_budget_views_and_estimates__fy_2015_v2.pdf; and U.S. House of Representatives, Committee on 
Small Business, “Views and Estimates of the Committee on Small Business on Matters to be set forth in the Concurrent 
Resolution on the Budget for Fiscal Year 2016,” February 12, 2015, at http://smallbusiness.house.gov/uploadedfiles/2-
12-2015_views_and_estimates_document.pdf. 
49 U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO), 2012 Annual Report: Opportunities to Reduce Duplication, Overlap 
and Fragmentation, Achieve Savings, and Enhance Revenue, GAO-12-342SP, February 28, 2012, p. 55, at 
http://www.gao.gov/assets/590/588818.pdf. Also see GAO, Entrepreneurial Assistance: Opportunities Exist to Improve 
Programs’ Collaboration, Data-Tracking, and Performance Management, GAO-12-819, August 23, 2012, pp. 60-61, 
at http://www.gao.gov/assets/650/647267.pdf. 
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needs of various underserved populations, such as veterans. For example, during the 111th 
Congress, the House passed H.R. 2352, the Job Creation Through Entrepreneurship Act of 2009, 
on May 20, 2009, by a vote of 406-15. The Senate did not take action on the bill. In its committee 
report accompanying the bill, the House Committee on Small Business concluded at that time that 
each  ED  [Entrepreneurial  Development]  program  has  a  unique  mandate  and  service 
delivery approach that is customized to its particular clients. However, as a network, the 
programs  have  established  local  connections  and  resources  that  benefit  entrepreneurs 
within a region. Enhanced coordination among this network is critical to make the most of 
scarce resources available for small businesses. It can also ensure that best practices are 
shared amongst providers that have similar goals but work within different contexts.50 
The bill was designed to enhance oversight and coordination of the SBA’s management and 
technical assistance training programs by requiring the SBA to coordinate these programs “with 
State and local economic development agencies and other federal agencies as appropriate” and to 
“report annually to Congress, in consultation with other federal departments and agencies as 
appropriate, on opportunities to foster coordination, limit duplication, and improve program 
delivery for federal entrepreneurial development activities.”51 
In a related development, as mentioned, the Obama Administration formed the Interagency Task 
Force for Veterans Small Business Development by executive order on April 26, 2010. The 
SBA’s representative chairs the task force, which is composed of senior representatives from 
seven federal agencies and four representatives from veterans’ organizations.52 One of the task 
force’s goals is to improve “collaboration, integration and focus across federal agencies, key 
programs (e.g., the Transition Assistance Program), veterans’ service organizations, states, and 
academia.”53 
On November 1, 2011, the task force issued 18 recommendations, including recommendations 
designed to increase and augment federal entrepreneurial training and technical assistance 
programs offered to veterans. For example, it recommended the development of a “standardized, 
national entrepreneurship training program specifically for veterans” that “could utilize expert 
local instructors, including academics and successful small business owners, to provide training 
in skills used to create and grow entrepreneurial ventures and small business. The national 
program could provide engaging training modules and workshops dedicated to the basics of 
launching a business.”54 The task force also recommended the development of a web portal “that 
allows veterans to access entrepreneurship resources from across the government.”55 Since then, 
                                                 
50 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Job Creation Through Entrepreneurship Act of 2009, report to 
accompany H.R. 2352, 111th Cong., 1st sess., May 15, 2009, H.Rept. 111-112 (Washington: GPO, 2009), pp. 17-18. 
51 H.R. 2352, the Job Creation Through Entrepreneurship Act of 2009, Section 601. Expanding Entrepreneurship. 
52 The seven federal agencies are the SBA, U.S. General Services Administration, U.S. Office of Management and 
Budget, and the Departments of Defense, Labor, Treasury, and Veterans Affairs. The four veterans’ organizations are 
Association of State Directors of Veterans Affairs, Student Veterans of America, the American Legion, and VET-
Force. 
53 Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development, “Report to the President: Empowering Veterans 
Through Entrepreneurship,” November 1, 2011, p. 6, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/FY2012-
Final%20Veterans%20TF%20Report%20to%20President.pdf (hereinafter Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small 
Business Development, “Report to the President”). 
54 Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development, “Report to the President,” p. 15. 
55 Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business Development, “Report to the President”, p. 8. 
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the task force has met quarterly and its annual reports document its efforts to address the 18 
recommendations.56 
Veterans’ Access to Capital 
Conventional wisdom asserts that the experiences and skills veterans gain from military service 
(such as teamwork, leadership and management skills, work ethic and self-discipline, 
perseverance, and crisis management) are useful in preparing them to become successful 
entrepreneurs. However, it has been surmised that veterans may have a difficult time building a 
sufficient credit score and management history necessary to gain access to capital due to the 
frequent moves and overseas travel associated with military life. A recent analysis of small 
business owner responses to the Federal Reserve Banks’ Small Business Credit Survey found that 
many veterans cite access to capital as one of their top challenges in starting a business. Veteran 
small business owners also reported greater difficulty in accessing capital than nonveteran small 
business owners.57 For example, veteran small business owners reported approximately 10% 
lower loan approval rates than nonveteran small business owners and more financing shortfalls.58  
The study concluded that there were three possible explanations for veterans experiencing access 
to capital difficulties: 
  lower amounts sought/lender mismatch—a greater share of veteran small 
business owners reported seeking $100,000 or less in financing compared to 
nonveteran small business owners. Because it can be more costly for larger 
lending sources (i.e., banks) to process smaller loans due to fixed transaction 
costs, larger lenders tend to be less likely to approve smaller loans. Therefore, the 
authors argued that lower approval rates for veterans could be a mismatch in the 
type of lender from which financing was sought and the lender most likely to 
approve smaller loan amounts. 
  lower credit scores/insufficient credit history—veteran small business owners 
reported lower credit scores on average and a greater rate of credit denial due to 
insufficient credit history and collateral. The authors noted that these findings are 
in line with the notion that the frequent moves and overseas travel associated 
with military life can hinder veterans’ opportunities for building credit compared 
to nonveterans, and may not be indicative of their level of financial 
responsibility. 
  need to seek help earlier—veteran small business owners reported that they 
submitted more loan applications and had lower approval rates than nonveteran 
small business owners. The authors noted that SBA officials, who often see 
veterans after they have already attempted and failed to obtain business 
financing, indicated that some veteran small business owners may lack 
understanding of or preparation for the loan application process. Those officials 
                                                 
56 SBA, “Office of Veterans Business Development, Resources: Interagency Task Force on Veterans Small Business 
Development,” at https://www.sba.gov/offices/headquarters/ovbd/resources/14372.  
57 Sid Sankaran and Jessica Battisto, Financing Their Future: Veteran Entrepreneurs and Capital Access (Federal 
Reserve Bank of New York, November 2018), p. 8, at https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/media/smallbusiness/
2017/Report-on-Veteran-Entrepreneurs-and-Capital-Access.pdf. 
58 Sid Sankaran and Jessica Battisto, Financing Their Future: Veteran Entrepreneurs and Capital Access (Federal 
Reserve Bank of New York, November 2018), p. 18. 
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indicated that veteran small business owners who seek mentorship and help in 
understanding the credit and collateral requirements prior to applying for a loan 
could be better able to put together a successful loan application.59 
Veterans and SBA Loan Programs 
The SBA administers several loan guaranty programs, including the 7(a) and the 504/CDC 
programs, to encourage lenders to provide loans to small businesses “that might not otherwise 
obtain financing on reasonable terms and conditions.”60 As discussed below, the SBA has several 
policies in place to encourage VOSBs to participate in its lending programs.  
SBA’s 7(a) Loan Guaranty Program 
The SBA’s 7(a) loan guaranty program is considered the agency’s flagship loan guaranty 
program. Its name is derived from Section 7(a) of the Small Business Act of 1953 (P.L. 83-163, as 
amended), which authorizes the SBA to provide business loans to American small businesses. 
The 7(a) program provides SBA-approved lenders a guaranty of up to 85% of loans of $150,000 
or less and up to 75% of loans exceeding $150,000, up to the program’s maximum gross loan 
amount of $5 million (up to $3.75 million maximum guaranty). In FY2021, the average approved 
7(a) loan amount was $704,581.61 
Proceeds from 7(a) loans may be used to establish a new business or to assist in the operation, 
acquisition, or expansion of an existing business. Specific uses include to acquire land (by 
purchase or lease); improve a site (e.g., grading, streets, parking lots, and landscaping); purchase, 
convert, expand, or renovate one or more existing buildings; construct one or more new 
buildings; acquire (by purchase or lease) and install fixed assets; purchase inventory, supplies, 
and raw materials; finance working capital; and refinance certain outstanding debts.  
A 7(a) loan is required to have the shortest appropriate term, depending upon the borrower’s 
ability to repay. The maximum term is 10 years, unless the loan finances or refinances real estate 
or equipment with a useful life exceeding 10 years. In that case, the loan term can be up to 25 
years, including extensions. Interest rates are negotiated between the borrower and lender but are 
subject to maximum rates.62 
As shown in Table 3, the amount of veteran 7(a) loan approvals peaked in FY2015, FY2016, and 
FY2021. In FY2021, the SBA approved 51,856 7(a) loans totaling more than $36.5 billion, 
including 2,183 loans to veterans (4.2%) totaling more than $1.19 billion (3.3%). In FY2021, the 
average approved veteran 7(a) loan amount was $546,960.63 
                                                 
59 Sid Sankaran and Jessica Battisto, Financing Their Future: Veteran Entrepreneurs and Capital Access (Federal 
Reserve Bank of New York, November 2018), p. 18. 
60 SBA, Fiscal Year 2010 Congressional Budget Justification, p. 30, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
aboutsbaarticle/Congressional_Budget_Justification_2010.pdf. Also see no credit elsewhere clause in P.L. 83-163, the 
Small Business Act (as amended). 
61 SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 9/30/2021),” at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
2021-10/WebsiteReport_asof_20210930.pdf (hereinafter SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 
9/30/2021)”). 
62 For further information and analysis concerning the SBA’s 7(a) loan guaranty program, see CRS Report R41146, 
Small Business Administration 7(a) Loan Guaranty Program, by Robert Jay Dilger. 
63 SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 9/30/2021).” 
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Table 3. 7(a) Loan Guaranty Program Approvals, FY2010-FY2021 
($ in millions) 
Total Amount of 
Total Amount of 
Total # of 7(a) 
7(a) Loans 
# of Veteran 7(a) 
Veteran 7(a) Loans 
FY 
Loans Approved 
Approved 
Loans Approved  
Approved 
2021 
51,856 
$36,537 
2,183 
$1,194 
2020 
42,302 
$22,550 
1,942 
$690 
2019 
50,907 
$23,176 
2,496 
$897 
2018 
60,353 
$25,372 
3,084 
$969 
2017 
62,430 
$25,447 
3,300 
$984 
2016 
64,074 
$24,128 
3,264 
$1,157 
2015 
63,461 
$23,584 
3,109 
$1,215 
2014 
52,044 
$19,191 
2,101 
$605 
2013 
46,395 
$17,865 
2,224 
$604 
2012 
44,376 
$15,153 
2,256 
$597 
2011 
53,710 
$19,640 
3,269 
$920 
2010 
47,000 
$12,406 
3,201 
$615 
Sources: SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 9/30/2014),” at http://www.sba.gov/sites/
default/files/aboutsbaarticle/WebsiteReport_asof9_30_2014.pdf; and SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major 
Programs (as of 9/30/2021),” at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2021-10/
WebsiteReport_asof_20210930.pdf. 
Notes: The number of 7(a) loans approved annually is typically 10% to 20% higher than the number of loans 
disbursed (e.g., a borrower decides not to accept the loan or a change in business ownership). The amount of 
7(a) loans approved annually is typically 10% to 15% higher than the amount disbursed. 
SBA’s 504/CDC Loan Guaranty Program 
The SBA’s 504/CDC loan guaranty program is administered through nonprofit certified 
development companies (CDCs). It provides long-term fixed rate financing for major fixed assets, 
such as land, buildings, equipment, and machinery. Of the total project costs, a third-party lender 
must provide at least 50% of the financing, the CDC provides up to 40% of the financing through 
a 100% SBA-guaranteed debenture, and the applicant provides at least 10% of the financing. The 
504/CDC program’s name is derived from Section 504 of the Small Business Investment Act of 
1958 (P.L. 85-699, as amended), which provides the most recent authorization for the sale of 
504/CDC debentures.64 In FY2021, the average approved 504/CDC loan amount was $849,328.65 
As shown in Table 4, the amount of veteran 504/CDC loan approvals peaked in FY2012, and, 
after declining somewhat for several years, increased in FY2020 and FY2021. In FY2021, the 
SBA approved 9,676 504/CDC loans totaling more than $8.2 billion, including 244 loans to 
veterans (2.5%) totaling $172.1 million (2.1%). In FY2021, the average approved veteran 
504/CDC loan amount was $705,492.66 
                                                 
64 For further information and analysis concerning the SBA’s 504 Certified Development Company (504/CDC) loan 
guaranty program, see CRS Report R41184, Small Business Administration 504/CDC Loan Guaranty Program, by 
Robert Jay Dilger. 
65 SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 9/30/2021).” 
66 SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 9/30/2021).” 
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Table 4. 504/CDC Loan Guaranty Program Approvals, FY2010-FY2021 
($ in millions) 
Total # of 
Total Amount of 
# of Veteran 
Total Amount of 
504/CDC Loans 
504/CDC Loans 
504/CDC Loans 
Veteran 504/CDC 
FY 
Approved 
Approved 
Approved  
Loans Approved 
2021 
9,676 
$8,218 
244 
$172 
2020 
7,119 
$5,827 
189 
$145 
2019 
6,099 
$4,958 
128 
$87 
2018 
5,874 
$4,753 
158 
$95 
2017 
6,218 
$5,014 
202 
$136 
2016 
5,938 
$4,740 
244 
$159 
2015 
5,787 
$4,298 
254 
$155 
2014 
5,885 
$4,199 
252 
$157 
2013 
7,708 
$5,227 
372 
$217 
2012 
9,471 
$6,712 
472 
$319 
2011 
7,983 
$4,845 
411 
$248 
2010 
7,833 
$4,433 
367 
$185 
Sources: SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 9/30/2014),” at http://www.sba.gov/sites/
default/files/aboutsbaarticle/WebsiteReport_asof9_30_2014.pdf; and SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major 
Programs (as of 9/30/2021),” at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2021-10/
WebsiteReport_asof_20210930.pdf. 
Notes: Based on previous experience, the number of 504/CDC loans approved is typically about 4% to 5% 
higher than the actual number of loans disbursed (e.g., some borrowers decide not to accept the loan or there is 
a change in ownership); and the amount of debentures (loans) approved is typically 10% to 12% higher than the 
amount of debentures disbursed. 
SBA’s 7(a) Loan Guaranty Subprograms and Fee Waivers 
The SBA administers several 7(a) loan guaranty subprograms that offer streamlined and 
expedited loan procedures to encourage lenders to provide loans to specific groups of borrowers 
identified by the SBA as having difficulty accessing capital. In the past, the Patriot Express 
program (2007-2013) encouraged lenders to provide loans to veterans and their spouses. It 
provided loans of up to $500,000 (with a guaranty of up to 85% of loans of $150,000 or less and 
up to 75% of loans exceeding $150,000).67 
The SBA considered the Patriot Express program a success, but some veterans’ organizations 
expressed concern that many veterans, especially during and immediately following the Great 
                                                 
67 Eligible businesses were required to be owned and controlled (51% or more) by one or more of the following groups: 
veteran, active duty military participating in the military’s Transition Assistance Program, reservist or National Guard 
member or a spouse of any of these groups, a widowed spouse of a servicemember who died while in service, or a 
widowed spouse of a veteran who died of a service-connected disability. See SBA, “SOP 50 10 5(E): Lender and 
Development Company Loan Programs,” (effective June 1, 2012), pp. 83, 127, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/
files/SOP%2050%2010%205(E)%20(5-16-2012)%20clean.pdf. The program’s interest rates were negotiable with the 
lender, subject to the same maximum rate limitations as the 7(a) program, which vary depending upon the size and 
maturity of the loan. It also had the same fees as the 7(a) program, which also varies depending on the size and maturity 
of the loan. 
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Recession (December 2007 to June 2009), experienced difficulty finding lenders willing to 
provide them Patriot Express loans.68 In addition, GAO reported in September 2013 that with the 
exception of loans approved in 2007, Patriot Express loans defaulted at a higher rate than regular 
7(a) loans and loans made under the SBAExpress program (a 7(a) loan guaranty subprogram 
offering streamlined borrower application and lender approval procedures).69 Over its history, the 
Patriot Express program disbursed 9,414 loans totaling more than $791 million.70 
On January 1, 2014, the SBA implemented a new, streamlined application process for 7(a) loans 
of $350,000 or less. As part of an overall effort to streamline and simplify its loan application 
process, the SBA also eliminated several 7(a) subprograms, including the Patriot Express 
program. In anticipation of ending the Patriot Express program, the SBA announced on 
November 8, 2013, that it would waive the up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee for loans to a 
veteran or veteran’s spouse under the SBAExpress program from January 1, 2014, through the 
end of FY2014 (called the Veterans Advantage Program).71  
The SBA announced that this fee waiver was part “of SBA’s broader efforts to make sure that 
veterans have the tools they need to start and grow a business.”72 The Obama Administration 
continued this fee waiver for veterans through the end of FY2015.  
During the 113th Congress, S. 2143, the Veterans Entrepreneurship Act, would have authorized 
and made the Veterans Advantage Program’s fee waiver permanent. P.L. 113-235, the 
Consolidated and Further Continuing Appropriations Act, 2015, provided statutory authorization 
for the fee waiver for FY2015. 
                                                 
68 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship, Assessing Federal Small Business 
Assistance Programs for Veterans and Reservists, hearing, 110th Cong., 1st sess., January 31, 2007, S.Hrg. 110-209 
(Washington: GPO, 2007), p. 32; U.S. Congress, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Subcommittee on Economic 
Opportunity, Status of Veterans Small Business, hearing, 111th Cong., 2nd sess., April 29, 2010, House Committee on 
Veterans’ Affairs Serial No. 111-74 (Washington: GPO, 2010), pp. 17, 75 (hereinafter U.S. Congress, House 
Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Status of Veterans Small Business); and SBA, “Popular SBA Patriot Express Loan 
Initiative Renewed for Three More Years,” December 10, 2010, at https://www.sba.gov/content/popular-sba-patriot-
express-loan-initiative-renewed-three-more-years. 
69 GAO, Patriot Express: SBA Should Evaluate the Program and Enhance Eligibility Controls, GA)-13-727, 
September 13, 2013, pp. i, 10, 16-20, 25-30, 46-49, at http://www.gao.gov/assets/660/657793.pdf (hereinafter GAO, 
Patriot Express). 
70 SBA, Office of Congressional and Legislative Affairs, “Correspondence with the authors,” February 21, 2014. 
71 The SBAExpress program’s fees are the same as the 7(a) loan program’s fees. SBAExpress loans of $150,000 or less 
approved in FY2014 do not have an up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee, and these loans do not have an annual, 
ongoing loan servicing fee. SBAExpress loans of $150,001 to the SBAExpress limit of $350,000, with a maturity of 
one year or less, have a 0.25% up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee and a 0.52% annual, ongoing loan servicing fee. 
SBAExpress loans of $150,001 to the SBAExpress limit of $350,000, with a maturity over one year have a 3.0% up-
front, one-time loan guaranty fee and a 0.52% annual, ongoing loan servicing fee. To qualify for a waiver of the 3.0% 
up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee, the business must be 51% or more owned and controlled by an individual or 
individuals in one or more of the following groups: veterans (other than dishonorably discharged); service-disabled 
veterans; active duty military servicemembers participating in the military’s Transition Assistance Program (TAP); 
reservists and National Guard members; current spouse of any veteran, active duty servicemember, or any reservist or 
National Guard member; or widowed spouse of a servicemember who died while in service or of a service-connected 
disability. See SBA, “SBA Announces New Measures to Help Get Small Business Loans Into the Hands of Veterans,” 
November 8, 2013, at https://www.sba.gov/content/sba-announces-new-measures-help-get-small-business-loans-hands-
veterans; and SBA, “Procedural Notice: SBA Veterans Advantage,” December 18, 2013, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/
default/files/lender_notices/5000-1299_0.pdf. 
72 SBA, “SBA Announces New Measures to Help Get Small Business Loans Into the Hands of Veterans,” November 8, 
2013, at https://www.sba.gov/content/sba-announces-new-measures-help-get-small-business-loans-hands-veterans. 
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During the 114th Congress, P.L. 114-38, the Veterans Entrepreneurship Act of 2015, authorized 
and made the SBA’s practice of waiving the SBAExpress loan program’s one time, up-front 
guaranty fee for veterans (and their spouses) permanent beginning on or after October 1, 2015, 
except during any upcoming fiscal year for which the President’s budget, submitted to Congress, 
includes a credit subsidy cost for the 7(a) program, in its entirety, that is above zero.73  
The SBA waived the up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee for loans to a veteran or veteran’s 
spouse under the SBAExpress program in FY2016-FY2019, but did not do so in FY2020 because 
the President’s FY2020 budget forecast the need for an appropriation of $99 million for 7(a) 
credit subsidy costs in FY2020.74 Also, the SBA did not anticipate waiving this fee in FY2021 
because the President’s FY2021 budget forecasts the need for an appropriation of $15 million for 
7(a) credit subsidy costs in FY2021.75 As mentioned, P.L. 116-136, the CARES Act, among other 
provisions, eliminated the zero subsidy requirement to waive SBAExpress loan fees for veterans. 
The SBAExpress program is designed to increase the availability of credit to small businesses by 
permitting lenders to use their existing documentation and procedures in return for receiving a 
reduced SBA guaranty on loans.76 It provides a 50% loan guaranty on loan amounts up to 
$500,000. In FY2021, the SBA approved 18,064 SBAExpress loans (34.8% of total 7(a) program 
loan approvals) totaling $2.3 billion (6.3% of total 7(a) program amount approvals).77 
The SBA also waived the up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee for smaller 7(a) loans (including 
those to veterans) in FY2014, FY2015, FY2016, FY2017, and FY2018; and waived the annual 
service fee for 7(a) loans of $150,000 or less made to small businesses located in a rural area or a 
HUBZone and reduced the up-front one-time guaranty fee for these loans from 2.0% to 0.6667% 
of the guaranteed portion of the loan in FY2019.78 
In FY2015 and FY2016, the SBA also waived 50% of the up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee on 
all non-SBAExpress 7(a) loans to veterans exceeding $150,000. In FY2017, the SBA waived 50% 
of the up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee on all non-SBAExpress 7(a) loans to veterans of 
                                                 
73 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Small Business, Veterans Entrepreneurship Act of 2015, report to accompany 
H.R. 2499, 114th Cong., 1st sess., June 25, 2015, H.Rept. 114-187 (Washington: GPO, 2015), p. 9. The act also 
increased the 7(a) program’s FY2015 authorization limit to $23.5 billion from $18.75 billion.  
74 SBA, “FY2020 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2018 Annual Performance Report,” pp. 31-33, at 
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2019-04/
SBA%20FY%202020%20Congressional%20Justification_final%20508%20%204%2023%202019.pdf. 
75 SBA, “FY2021 Congressional Budget Justification and FY2019 Annual Performance Report,” p. 29, at 
https://www.sba.gov/document/report—congressional-budget-justification-annual-performance-report. 
76 SBA, “The SBA Express Pilot Program: Inspection Report,” June 1998, p. 3.  
77 SBA, “SBA Lending Statistics for Major Programs (as of 9/30/2021).” 
78 SBA, “SBA Information Notice: 7(a) Fees Effective on October 1, 2018,” at https://www.sba.gov/document/
information-notice-5000-180010-7a-fees-effective-october-1-2018. The SBA waived the up-front, one-time loan 
guaranty fee and ongoing servicing fee for 7(a) loans of $150,000 or less approved in FY2014, FY2015, and FY2016; 
waived the up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee for 7(a) loans of $150,000 or less approved in FY2017; and waived the 
up-front, one-time loan guaranty fee for 7(a) loans of $125,000 or less approved in FY2018 as a means to encourage 
the demand for smaller 7(a) loans.  
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$150,001 to $500,000.79 In FY2018, the SBA waived 50% of the up-front, one-time loan guaranty 
fee on all non-SBAExpress 7(a) loans to veterans of $150,001 to $350,000.80  
Congressional Issues: Access 
As mentioned, the SBA has indicated in both testimony at congressional hearings and in press 
releases that it viewed the Patriot Express program and its own overall effort to enhance veterans’ 
access to capital as a success.81 For example, when the SBA announced its veterans’ fee waiver 
for the SBAExpress program, it also announced that its lending to VOSBs had nearly doubled 
since 2009 and that “in FY2013, SBA supported $1.86 billion in loans for 3,094 veteran-owned 
small businesses.”82 
Congressional testimony provided by various veteran service organizations provides a somewhat 
different perspective. The SBA’s self-evaluation of its success in assisting veterans access capital 
has focused primarily on the agency’s efforts to streamline the loan application approval process 
(e.g., minimizing paperwork requirements and reducing the time necessary for the SBA to review 
and approve applications submitted by local lenders) and aggregate lending amounts (e.g., the 
number and amount of loans approved). In contrast, veteran service organizations focus primarily 
on program outcomes, especially the likelihood of a veteran being approved for a SBA loan by a 
local lender. For example, a representative of the American Legion testified at a congressional 
hearing in 2010 that, at that time, being turned down for a SBA Patriot Express loan by a private 
lender “is probably the largest, most frequent complaint that we receive from our business 
owners.”83 At that same congressional hearing, a representative of the Vietnam Veterans of 
America testified in response to that statement that “I would have to concur … in talking with 
some of the veterans with regard to the Patriot Express Loan, they are having difficulties also to 
acquire that capital. The rationale seems to be … the banks in general seem to be tightening the 
credit, their lending practices, so that is … what we are hearing.”84 More recently, GAO reported 
in 2013 that “selected loan recipients, lenders, and veteran service organizations said that a low 
awareness of the Patriot Express program among the military community was among the most 
frequently cited challenges.”85 
No empirical assessments of veterans’ experiences with either the SBA’s Patriot Express or 
SBAExpress loan programs exist that would be useful for determining the relative ease or 
difficulty VOSBs have in accessing capital through the SBA’s loan programs. Since 2010, many 
lenders report that they have eased their credit standards, at least somewhat, for small business 
loans, suggesting the experiences of veterans seeking a SBA loan guaranty today may be 
                                                 
79 SBA, “SBA Information Notice: SBA Veterans Advantage – Renewal and Expansion of Fee Relief,” September 19, 
2014, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/lender_notices/5000-1319.pdf; SBA, “SBA Information Notice: SBA 
Veterans Advantage – Renewal and Expansion of Fee Relief,” September 30, 2015, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/
default/files/lender_notices/5000-1354.pdf; and SBA, “SBA Information Notice: Fees for 7(a) Loans Made to Veteran 
Owned Small Businesses, Effective October 1, 2016,” September 28, 2016, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
lender_notices/5000-1390.pdf. 
80 SBA, “SBA Information Notice: Fees for 7(a) Loans Made to Veteran Owned Small Businesses Effective October 1, 
2017,” at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/Notice_5000-1955_Veteran_Fees_FY18_1.pdf. 
81 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Status of Veterans Small Business, p. 75. 
82 SBA, “SBA Announces New Measures to Help Get Small Business Loans Into the Hands of Veterans,” November 8, 
2013, at https://www.sba.gov/content/sba-announces-new-measures-help-get-small-business-loans-hands-veterans. 
83 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Status of Veterans Small Business, p. 17. 
84 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Veterans’ Affairs, Status of Veterans Small Business, p. 17. 
85 GAO, Patriot Express, p. 33. 
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improved compared with their experiences in 2010. However, GAO found in 2013 that many 
veterans were not fully aware of the SBA’s Patriot Express program and that “over half of the 
Patriot Express loan recipients, six of the eight lenders, and two veteran service organizations … 
said that [the] SBA could do more to increase outreach to veteran entrepreneurs and better market 
the program to the military community.”86 GAO reported that low awareness of the SBA’s Patriot 
Express program and the SBA’s participating lenders were a continuing challenge for the SBA.87 
One option to provide additional information concerning veterans’ experiences with the SBA’s 
lenders would be to survey veterans who have received a SBA guaranteed loan. The survey could 
include questions concerning these veterans’ views of the programs, including the application 
process. However, obtaining a comprehensive list of veterans to survey who have been turned 
down for a SBA guaranteed loan by a private lender would be difficult given privacy concerns. 
In a related development concerning veterans’ access to capital, legislation was introduced during 
the 114th Congress (S. 1870, the Veterans Entrepreneurial Transition Act of 2015, and its House 
companion bill, H.R. 3248) to authorize a three-year pilot program, administered by the SBA, to 
provide grants to no more than 250 GI-Bill benefit-eligible veterans to start or acquire a 
qualifying business. The grant amount would have been calculated according to a formula related 
to the unused portion of the recipient’s GI-Bill benefits. Recipients would have been required to 
complete specified training and meet other program requirements, such as having an approved 
business plan. S. 1870 was ordered to be reported with an amendment in the nature of a substitute 
by the Senate Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship on July 29, 2015.  
In addition, H.R. 5698, the Strengthening Technical Assistance, Resources, and Training to 
Unleash the Potential of Veterans Act of 2016 (STARTUP Vets Act of 2016), and its companion 
bill in the Senate, S. 2273, would have authorized the SBA to provide up to $1.5 million in grants 
annually “from amounts made available to the Office of Veterans Business Development” to 
organizations to create and operate business incubators and accelerators that provide technical 
assistance and training to veterans (including their spouses and dependents) to enable them “to 
effectively transfer relevant skills to launch and accelerate small business concerns owned and 
controlled by covered individuals; and to create an avenue for high-performing covered 
individuals to meet and collaborate on business ideas.”88 
During the 115th Congress, S. 1056, the Veteran Small Business Export Promotion Act, and H.R. 
2835, To amend the Small Business Act, would have permanently waived “the guarantee fee for 
loans of not more than $150,000 provided to veterans and spouses of veterans under the [SBA’s] 
Export Working Capital, International Trade, and Export Express programs.”  
During the 116th Congress, S. 2138, the Small-Dollar and Veterans Loans Enhancement Act, 
would have, to the extent that costs are offset by appropriations, authorized the elimination or 
reduction of fees to the maximum extent possible for SBAExpress loans to veterans and their 
spouses and for 7(a) loans of $150,000 or less.  
                                                 
86 GAO, Patriot Express, p. 33. 
87 GAO, Patriot Express, p. 33. 
88 H.R. 5698, Section 3. Incubator and accelerator grant program. 
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Federal Contracting Goals for Service-Disabled 
Veteran-Owned Small Businesses 
Since 1978, federal agency heads have been required to establish federal procurement contracting 
goals, in consultation with the SBA, “that realistically reflect the potential of small business 
concerns” to participate in federal procurement. Each agency is required, at the conclusion of 
each fiscal year, to report its progress in meeting the goals to the SBA.89 The SBA negotiates the 
goals with each federal agency and establishes a small business eligible baseline for evaluating 
the agency’s performance.  
The small business eligible baseline excludes certain contracts that the SBA has determined do 
not realistically reflect the potential for small business participation in federal procurement, such 
as contracts awarded to mandatory and directed sources, awarded and performed overseas, funded 
predominately from agency-generated sources, not covered by Federal Acquisition Regulations, 
and not reported in the General Services Administration’s (GSA’s) Federal Procurement Data 
System–Next Generation (FPDS-NG) database (e.g., government procurement card purchases or 
contracts valued less than $10,000).90 These exclusions typically account for 18% to 20% of all 
federal prime contracts each year.  
Using FPDS-NG data, which are published in the GSA’s annual Small Business Goaling Report, 
the SBA evaluates the agencies’ performance against their negotiated goals and presents the 
results in the SBA’s annual Small Business Procurement Scorecards. Each agency that fails to 
achieve any proposed prime or subcontract goal is required to submit a justification to the SBA on 
why it failed to achieve a proposed or negotiated goal, with a proposed plan of corrective action.91 
Over the years, federal government-wide procurement contracting goals have been established for 
small businesses generally (P.L. 100-656, the Business Opportunity Development Reform Act of 
1988, and P.L. 105-135, the HUBZone Act of 1997—Title VI of the Small Business 
Reauthorization Act of 1997); small businesses owned and controlled by socially and 
economically disadvantaged individuals (P.L. 100-656); women (P.L. 103-355, the Federal 
Acquisition Streamlining Act of 1994); small businesses located within a Historically 
Underutilized Business Zone, or HUBZone (P.L. 105-135); and SDVOSBs (P.L. 106-50, the 
Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999). 
The current federal small business contracting goals are 
  at least 23% of the total value of all small business eligible prime contract awards 
to small businesses for each fiscal year; 
  5% of the total value of all small business eligible prime contract awards and 
subcontract awards to small disadvantaged businesses for each fiscal year; 
                                                 
89 P.L. 95-507, a bill to amend the Small Business Act and the Small Business Investment Act of 1958. 
90 See SBA, Office of Policy, Planning & Liaison, Office of Government Contracting & Business Development, “FY 
2018 Goaling Guidelines,” August 30, 2017, p. 4, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2018-06/
FY18_Small_Business_Goaling_Guidelines.pdf; and U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), Federal 
Procurement Data System—Next Generation, “What’s In FPDS-NG,” at https://www.fpds.gov/wiki/index.php/FPDS-
NG_FAQ. 
91 SBA, Office of Policy, Planning & Liaison, Office of Government Contracting & Business Development, “FY 2018 
Goaling Guidelines,” August 30, 2017, p. 6, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/2018-06/
FY18_Small_Business_Goaling_Guidelines.pdf. 
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  5% of the total value of all small business eligible prime contract awards and 
subcontract awards to women-owned small businesses; 
  3% of the total value of all small business eligible prime contract awards and 
subcontract awards to HUBZone small businesses; and 
  3% of the total value of all small business eligible prime contract awards and 
subcontract awards to SDVOSBs.92 
There are no punitive consequences for not meeting the small business procurement goals. 
However, the SBA’s Small Business Procurement Scorecards and GSA’s Small Business Goaling 
Report are distributed widely, receive media attention, and heighten public awareness of the issue 
of small business contracting. For example, agency performance as reported in the SBA’s Small 
Business Procurement Scorecards is often cited by Members during their questioning of federal 
agency witnesses during congressional hearings. 
As shown in Table 5, the FY2020 Small Business Procurement Scorecard indicates that federal 
agencies met the federal procurement goal for small businesses generally, small disadvantaged 
businesses, and SDVOSBs in FY2020 (see the third column).  
Table 5 also provides, for comparative purposes, the percentage of small business eligible 
contracts awarded to small businesses in FY2020 without the required double counting of awards 
in a disaster area and to Puerto Rico and other covered territories (see the fourth column), and the 
percentage of all federal contracts (without exclusions and without double counting) awarded to 
small businesses (see the fifth column). 
Table 5. Federal Procurement Goals and Percentage of FY2020 Federal Contract 
Dollars Awarded to Small Businesses, by Type 
Percentage of 
Percentage of 
Percentage of 
Federal 
Federal 
Federal Contracts 
Contracts (small 
Contracts (small 
(all reported 
business eligible, 
business eligible, 
contracts, 
Federal 
including double 
excluding double 
excluding double 
Business Type 
Goal 
counting) 
counting) 
counting) 
Small Businesses 
23.0% 
26.02% 
25.42% 
21.89% 
Small Disadvantaged 
5.0% 
10.54% 
10.39% 
9.08% 
Businesses 
Women-Owned Small 
5.0% 
4.85% 
4.71% 
4.10% 
Businesses 
HUBZone Small Businesses  
3.0% 
2.44% 
2.39% 
2.04% 
Service-Disabled Veteran-
3.0% 
4.28% 
4.23% 
3.92% 
Owned Small Businesses 
Sources: U.S. Small Business Administration, “Statutory Guidelines,” at https://www.sba.gov/content/statutory-
guidelines-0 (federal goals); U.S. Small Business Administration, “Government-Wide Performance, FY2020 Small 
Business Procurement Scorecard,” at https://www.sba.gov/document/support-small-business-procurement-
scorecard-overview; and data generated using General Service Administration, “Sam.Gov data bank,” July 31, 
2021, at https://sam.gov/reports/awards/adhoc (all reported contract dollars). 
Notes: In accordance with federal law, the Small Business Administration provided double credit, for scorecard 
purposes only, for prime contracts awarded in disaster areas that are awarded as a local set aside and a small 
business or other socioeconomic set aside when the vendor state is the same as the place of performance (see 
15 U.S.C. §644(f)) and for prime contracts awarded to businesses in Puerto Rico and covered territories (see 15 
                                                 
92 15 U.S.C. §644(g)(1)-(2). 
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U.S.C. §644(x)(1)). The Small Business Administration also included Department of Energy first-tier subcontract 
awards as required by P.L. 113-76, the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 (§318). 
The FY2020 Small Business Procurement Scorecard was made available on July 30, 2021, and reflects contracting 
data as of February 22, 2021. Small business eligible contracts totaled $559.981 billion in FY2020 and $145.8 
billion was awarded to small businesses ($142.4 without double counting), $59.0 billion to small disadvantaged 
businesses ($58.2 billion without double counting), $27.1 billion to women-owned small businesses ($26.4 billion 
without double counting), $13.6 billion to SBA-certified HUBZone small businesses ($13.4 billion without double 
counting), and $23.9 billion to service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses ($23.7 billion without double 
counting). The Department of Energy first-tier subcontract awards in FY2020 were: $3.36 billion to small 
businesses, $0.81 billion to small disadvantaged businesses, $0.76 billion to small women-owned businesses, 
$0.24 billion to SBA-certified HUBZone small businesses, and $0.23 billion to service-disabled veteran-owned 
small businesses. 
The percentages provided in the column for all reported contracts in FY2020 were calculated using contracting 
data as reported on July 31, 2021 (without double counting): $665.7 billion in total contracts; $145.8 billion to 
small businesses, $60.5 billion to small disadvantaged businesses, $27.3 billion to women-owned small businesses, 
$13.6 billion to SBA-certified HUBZone small businesses, and $26.1 billion to service-disabled veteran-owned 
small businesses. 
In related developments, 
  on November 17, 2015, the House passed H.R. 1694, the Fairness to Veterans for 
Infrastructure Investment Act of 2015. The bill would have revised the 
requirement that 10% of the award of contracts for federal-aid highway, federal 
public transportation, and highway safety research and development programs be 
set-aside for small businesses owned and controlled by socially and economically 
disadvantaged individuals. The bill would have required the set-aside to include 
VOSBs. 
  on June 16, 2016, the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Kingdomware 
Technologies, Inc. v. United States prohibited the VA from continuing its practice 
of making purchases through the Federal Supply Schedules without first 
considering whether the contract could be set aside for VOSBs. This decision has 
resulted in the VA awarding additional contracts to VOSBs. 
  P.L. 116-315, the Johnny Isakson and David P. Roe, M.D. Veterans Health Care 
and Benefits Improvement Act of 2020, authorized the VA to provide contracting 
preference to contractors that employ veterans on a full-time basis, with the 
preference based on the percentage of the contractor’s full-time employees who 
are veterans. 
In addition, the prevention of fraud in federal small business contracting programs, and in the 
SBA’s loan programs as well, has been a priority for both Congress and the SBA for many years, 
primarily because reports of fraud in these programs emerge with some regularity.93 Of particular 
interest to veterans, GAO has found that “the lack of an effective government-wide fraud-
                                                 
93 For example, see GAO, Small Business Administration: Undercover Tests Show HUBZone Program Remains 
Vulnerable to Fraud and Abuse, GAO-10-920T, July 28, 2010, at http://www.gao.gov/assets/130/125130.pdf; GAO, 
8(a) Program: Fourteen Ineligible Firms Received $325 Million in Sole-Source and Set-Aside Contracts, GAO-10-425, 
March 30, 2010, at http://www.gao.gov/assets/310/302472.pdf; GAO, Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small 
Business Program: Case Studies Show Fraud and Abuse Allowed Ineligible Firms to Obtain Millions of Dollars in 
Contracts, GAO-10-108, October 23, 2009, at http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-108; and GAO, Service-Disabled 
Veteran-Owned Small Business Program: Vulnerability to Fraud and Abuse Remains, GAO-12-697, August 1, 2012, at 
http://www.gao.gov/assets/600/593238.pdf. 
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prevention program” has left the SDVOSB procurement program “vulnerable to fraud and 
abuse.”94  
Under the Small Business Act, SDVOSBs can qualify for a federal government procurement set-
aside (a procurement in which only certain businesses may compete) or a sole-source award 
(awards proposed or made after soliciting and negotiating with only one source) if the small 
business is at least 51% unconditionally and directly owned and controlled by one or more 
service-disabled veteran.95 A veteran is defined as a person who has served “in the active military, 
naval, or air service, and who was discharged or released under conditions other than 
dishonorable.”96 A disability is service related when it “was incurred or aggravated ... in [the] line 
of duty in the active military, naval, or air service.”97 
Federal agencies may set aside procurements for SDVOSBs only if the contracting officer 
reasonably expects that offers will be received from at least two responsible small businesses and 
the award will be made at a fair market price (commonly known as the “rule of two” because of 
the focus on there being at least two small businesses involved).98 
Federal agencies may award sole contracts to SDVOSBs when (1) the contracting officer does not 
reasonably expect that two or more SDVOSBs will submit offers; (2) the anticipated award will 
not exceed $4.0 million ($7.0 million for manufacturing contracts); and (3) the award can be 
made at a fair and reasonable price.99 Otherwise, sole-source awards may only be made to 
SDVOSBs under other authority, such as the Competition in Contracting Act.100 SDVOSBs are 
not eligible for price evaluation preferences in unrestricted competitions. 
The VA is statutorily required to establish annual goals for the awarding of VA contracts to both 
SDVOSBs and VOSBs.101 The VA is authorized to use “other than competitive procedures” in 
meeting these goals. For example, it may award any contract whose value is below the simplified 
acquisition threshold (generally $250,000) to a VOSB on a sole-source basis, and it may also 
make sole-source awards of contracts whose value (including options) is between $250,000 and 
$5 million, provided that certain conditions are met. When these conditions are not met, the VA is 
generally required to set aside the contract for SDVOSBs or other veteran-owned small 
businesses. 
                                                 
94 GAO, Service-Disabled Veteran-Owned Small Business Program: Preliminary Information on Actions Taken by 
Agencies to Address Fraud and Abuse and Remaining Vulnerabilities, GAO-11-589T, July 28, 2011, p. 3, at 
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-11-589T. 
95 15 U.S.C. §632(q)(1) & (4); P.L. 108-183, the Veterans Benefits Act of 2003; and P.L. 109-461, the Veterans 
Benefits, Health Care, and Information Technology Act of 2006. 
96 38 U.S.C. §101(2). 
97 38 U.S.C. §101(16). 
98 15 U.S.C. §657f(b). 
99 15 U.S.C. §657f(c) (statutory requirements); and 48 C.F.R. §19.1406(a) (increasing the price thresholds).  
100 10 U.S.C. §2304(c)(1)-(7) (procurements of defense agencies); and 41 U.S.C. §3304(a)(1)-(7) (procurements of 
civilian agencies). See also 48 C.F.R. §§6.302-1 to 6.302-7. 
101 P.L. 109-461 and P.L. 110-389, the Veterans’ Benefits Improvements Act of 2008. In FY2019, the Department of 
Veterans Affairs’ small business procurement goals are 29.6% for small businesses generally, 17.0% for veteran-owned 
small businesses, 15.0% for service-disabled veteran-owned small businesses (SDVOSBs), 5.0% for small 
disadvantaged businesses (including Section 8(a)), 5.0% for women-owned small businesses, and 3.0% for Historically 
Underutilized Business Zone (HUBZone) small businesses. See The Department of Veterans Affairs, “Small Business 
Program Goals and Accomplishments,” at https://www.va.gov/osdbu/library/accomplishments.asp. 
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SDVOSBs can generally self-certify as to their eligibility for contracting preferences available 
under the Small Business Act.102 However, in an effort to address fraud in VA contracting, VOSBs 
and SDVOSBs must be listed in the VA’s VetBiz database and have their eligibility verified by 
the VA to be eligible for preferences in certain VA contracts.103 
Businesses that fraudulently misrepresent their size or status have long been subject to civil and 
criminal penalties under Section 16 of the Small Business Act; SBA regulations implementing 
Section 16; and other provisions of law, such as the False Claims Act, Fraud and False Statements 
Act, Program Fraud Civil Remedies Act, and Contract Disputes Act.104 
Several bills were introduced during the 112th Congress to address fraud in small business 
contracting programs in various ways. Of particular interest to veterans, S. 3572, the Restoring 
Tax and Regulatory Certainty to Small Businesses Act of 2012, and S. 633, the Small Business 
Contracting Fraud Prevention Act of 2011, would have, among other changes, amended Section 
16 of the Small Business Act to expressly include SDVOSBs among the types of small businesses 
subject to penalties for fraud under that section.105 The bills would also have required SDVOSBs 
to register in the VA’s VetBiz database, or any successor database, and have their status verified 
by the VA to be eligible for SDVOSB contracting preferences under the Small Business Act. 
During the 113th Congress, S. 2334, the Improving Opportunities for Service-Disabled Veteran-
Owned Small Businesses Act of 2013, and its companion bill in the House, H.R. 2882, and H.R. 
4435, the Howard P. “Buck” McKeon National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2015, 
which was passed by the House on May 22, 2014, included a provision that would have 
authorized the transfer of the VetBiz database’s administration and SDVOSB verification from 
the VA to the SBA. 
Advocates of requiring SDVOSBs to register in the VetBiz database and have their status verified 
by the VA (or the SBA) to be eligible for contracting preferences under the Small Business Act 
argue that doing so would reduce fraud.106 As then-Senator Snowe stated on the Senate floor 
when she introduced S. 633, “Our legislation attempts to remedy the spate of illegitimate firms 
siphoning away contracts from the rightful businesses trying to compete within the SBA’s 
contracting programs.”107 
Others worry that requiring SDVOSBs to register in the VetBiz database and have their status 
verified by the VA (or the SBA) to be eligible for contracting preferences under the Small 
Business Act may add to the paperwork burdens of small businesses. They seek alternative ways 
                                                 
102 13 C.F.R. §125.15. 
103 38 U.S.C. §8127(a)(1)(A). P.L. 109-461 requires the Secretary of Veterans Affairs to “establish a goal for each 
fiscal year for participation in Department contracts (including subcontracts)” by veteran-owned small businesses. The 
Secretary is also required to establish a separate goal for the participation of SDVOSBs in agency contracts and 
subcontracts. 38 U.S.C. §8127(a)(1)(A). However, the latter goal can be no less than the government-wide goal for the 
percentage of contract and subcontract dollars awarded to SDVOSBs given in Section 15(g)(1) of the Small Business 
Act (currently 3%), while the former goal is within the Secretary’s discretion. See 38 U.S.C. §8127(a)(2)-(3).  
104 See 15 U.S.C. §645; and 13 C.F.R. §125.29. 
105 Currently, Section 36 of the Small Business Act, which governs set-asides and sole-source awards for SDVOSBs, 
provides that “[r]ules similar to the rules of paragraphs (5) and (6) of Section 637(m) of this title shall apply for 
purposes of this section.” Section 8(m) governs set-asides for women-owned small businesses and itself provides that 
such businesses are subject to penalties for fraud under Section 16. Thus, an argument could potentially be made that 
SDVOSBs are currently subject to penalties under Section 16 even if they are not expressly included there. 
106 See 13 C.F.R. §§125.9-125.13. 
107 Senator Olympia Snowe, “Statements on Introduced Bills and Joint Resolutions,” remarks in the Senate, 
Congressional Record, vol. 157, part no. 41 (March 17, 2011), p. S1843. 
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to address the need to reduce fraud in federal small business procurement programs that do not 
increase the paperwork requirements of small businesses.108 Still others note that the effectiveness 
of any change to prevent fraud in veteran-owned and SDVOSB procurement programs largely 
depends upon how the change is implemented. For example, in July 2011, the VA’s Office of 
Inspector General concluded that the VA’s implementation of its veteran-owned and SDVOSB 
procurement fraud prevention programs needed improvement: 
We project that VA awarded ineligible businesses at least 1,400 VOSB [Veteran Owned 
Small  Business]  and  SDVOSB  [Service-Disabled  Veteran  Owned  Small  Business] 
contracts valued at $500 million annually and that it will award about $2.5 billion in VOSB 
and  SDVOSB  contracts  to  ineligible  businesses  over  the  next  5  years  if  it  does  not 
strengthen  oversight  and  verification  procedures.  VA  and  the  Office  of  Small  and 
Disadvantaged  Business  Utilization  (OSDBU)  need  to  improve  contracting  officer 
oversight, document reviews, completion of site visits for “high-risk” businesses, and the 
accuracy of VetBiz Vendor Information Pages information.109  
As mentioned, P.L. 116-283, the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2021, 
included a provision that requires the verification of SDVOSBs to be transferred from the VA to 
the SBA within two years of enactment (VA will continue to verify the individual’s status as a 
veteran or a service-disabled veteran and the SBA will verify that the business is small). In 
addition, SDVOSBs will no longer be allowed to self-certify their status when bidding on a 
federal contract with a SDVOSB contracting preference (e.g., a set-aside or sole source contract). 
Instead, they will have to be SBA-certified prior to the contact’s approval.  
The Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster 
Loan Program 
P.L. 106-50, the Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999, signed 
into law on August 17, 1999, authorized the SBA’s Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster 
Loan (MREIDL) program. The SBA published the final rule establishing the program in the 
Federal Register on July 25, 2001, with an effective date of August 24, 2001.110 
The Senate Committee on Small Business provided, in its committee report on the Veterans 
Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999, the following reasons for 
supporting the authorization of the MREIDL Program: 
During  and  after  the  Persian  Gulf  War  in  the  early  1990’s,  the  Committee  heard  from 
reservists whose businesses were harmed, severely crippled, or even lost, by their absence. 
Problems  faced  by  reservists  called  to  active  duty  and  their  small  businesses  were  of  a 
varied  nature  and  included  cash-flow  problems,  difficulties  with  training  an  appropriate 
alternate manager on very short notice to run the business during the period of service, lost 
clientele  upon return,  and  on occasion,  bankruptcy.  These  hardships  can occur  during  a 
                                                 
108 U.S. Congress, House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Subcommittee on Technology, 
Information Policy, Intergovernmental Relations and Procurement Reform, Jobs for Wounded Warriors: Increasing 
Access to Contracts for Service Disabled Veterans, 112th Cong., 2nd sess., February 7, 2012, Serial No. 112-143 
(Washington: GPO, 2012), pp. 86-90. 
109 U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, Office of Inspector General, “Audit of Veteran-Owned and Service-Disabled 
Veteran-Owned Small Business Programs,” July 25, 2011, p. i, at http://www.va.gov/oig/52/reports/2011/VAOIG-10-
02436-234.pdf. 
110 SBA, “Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loans,” 66 Federal Register 38528-38531, July 25, 2001. 
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period of national emergency or during a period of contingency operation when troops are 
deployed overseas. 
To help such reservists and their small businesses, the Committee seeks to provide credit 
and management assistance to small businesses when an essential employee (i.e., an owner, 
manager or vital member of the business’ staff) is a reservist  called to active duty. The 
Committee  believes  that  financial  assistance  in  the  form  of  loans,  loan  deferrals  and 
managerial guidance are effective ways to minimize the adverse financial demands of the 
call to active duty. They not only ameliorate financial difficulties but also strengthen small 
businesses.111 
The House Committee on Small Business also supported the program’s authorization, indicating 
in its committee report that the program 
will also fulfill a long unmet need to assist our military reservists who are small business 
owners. Often these individuals, called to service at short notice, come back from fighting 
to protect our freedoms only to find their businesses in shambles. H.R. 1568 will establish 
loan  deferrals,  technical  and  managerial  assistance,  and  loan  programs  for  these  citizen 
soldiers so that while they risk their lives they need not risk their livelihoods.112 
As mentioned, the SBA provides direct loans for owners of businesses of all sizes, homeowners, 
and renters to assist their recovery from natural disasters. The SBA’s MREIDL program provides 
disaster assistance in the form of direct loans of up to $2 million to help small business owners 
who are not able to obtain credit elsewhere to (1) meet ordinary and necessary operating expenses 
that they could have met but are not able to meet; or (2) enable them to market, produce, or 
provide products or services ordinarily marketed, produced, or provided by the business that 
cannot be done because an essential employee (including the owner) has been called up to active 
duty in his or her role as a military reservist or member of the National Guard due to a period of 
military conflict.113 Under specified circumstances, the SBA may waive the $2 million limit (e.g., 
the small business is in immediate danger of going out of business, is a major source of 
employment, employs 10% or more of the workforce within the commuting area in which the 
business is located).114 
P.L. 106-50 defines an essential employee as “an individual who is employed by a small business 
concern and whose managerial or technical expertise is critical to the successful day-to-day 
operations of that small business concern.”115 The act defines a military conflict as (1) a period of 
war declared by Congress; or (2) a period of national emergency declared by Congress or the 
President; or (3) a period of contingency operation. A contingency operation is designated by the 
                                                 
111 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development 
Act of 1999, report to accompany H.R. 1568, 106th Cong., 1st sess., August 4, 1999, S.Rept. 106-136 (Washington: 
GPO, 1999), p. 4. 
112 U.S. Congress, Senate Committee on Small Business, Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development 
Act of 1999, report to accompany H.R. 1568, 106th Cong., 1st sess., August 4, 1999, S.Rept. 106-136 (Washington: 
GPO, 1999), p. 15. 
113 SBA, “Disaster Assistance Program: SOP 50-30-7,” May 13, 2011, p. 48, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/
sops/SOP%2050%2030%207.pdf; and 13 C.F.R. §123.508. For further information and analysis concerning the SBA’s 
disaster assistance loan program, see CRS Report R41309, The SBA Disaster Loan Program: Overview and Possible 
Issues for Congress, by Bruce R. Lindsay. 
114 13 C.F.R. §123.507. 
115 P.L. 106-50, the Veterans Entrepreneurship and Small Business Development Act of 1999, Section 402. Assistance 
To Active Duty Military Reservists; and 15 U.S.C. §636(b). The SBA’s Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster 
Loan Program applies to economic injury suffered or likely to be suffered as the result of a period of military conflict 
occurring or ending on or after March 24, 1999. 
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Secretary of Defense as an operation in which our military may become involved in military 
actions, operations, or hostilities (peacekeeping operations).116 
The SBA is authorized to make such disaster loans either directly or in cooperation with banks or 
other lending institutions through agreements to participate on an immediate or deferred basis. 
The loan term may be up to a maximum of 30 years and is determined by the SBA in accordance 
with the borrower’s ability to repay the loan. The loan’s interest rate is the SBA’s published 
interest rate for an Economic Injury Disaster Loan at the time the application for assistance is 
approved by the SBA. Economic Injury Disaster Loan interest rates may not exceed 4%. 
The SBA is not required by law to require collateral on disaster loans. However, the SBA has 
established collateral requirements for disaster loans based on “a balance between protection of 
the Agency’s interest as a creditor and as a provider of disaster assistance.”117 The SBA generally 
does not require collateral to secure a MREIDL loan of $50,000 or less. Larger loan amounts 
require collateral, but the SBA will not decline a request for a MREIDL loan for a lack of 
collateral if the SBA is reasonably certain the borrower can repay the loan.118 
The SBA disbursed one MREIDL loan in FY2014, none in FY2015, three in FY2016, three in 
FY2017, two in FY2018, two in FY2019, and two in FY2020. Since the MREIDL’s inception 
through September 30, 2020, the SBA has disbursed 358 MREIDL loans amounting to $33.3 
million. Of these 358 loans, 62 loans totaling $5.9 million have been charged off (a declaration 
that the debt is unlikely to be collected) by the SBA.119 
Because the MREIDL program is relatively small and noncontroversial, this report does not 
present a discussion of the congressional issues affecting the program. 
Concluding Observations 
Congress has demonstrated a continuing interest in federal programs designed to assist veterans 
transition from military to civilian life. For example, the SBA’s veteran business development 
programs, loan guaranty programs, and federal procurement programs for small businesses 
generally, including SDVOSBs, have all been subject to congressional hearings during the past 
several Congresses. Also, as has been discussed, several bills have been introduced in recent 
Congresses to address the SBA’s management of these programs and fraud. 
Given the many factors that influence business success, measuring the effectiveness of the SBA’s 
veteran assistance programs, especially the programs’ effect on veteran job retention and creation, 
is both complicated and challenging. For example, it is difficult to determine with any degree of 
precision or certainty the extent to which any changes in the success of a small business result 
primarily from that business’s participation in the SBA’s programs or from changes in the 
broader economy. That task is made even more challenging by the absence of performance 
outcome measures that could serve as a guide. In most instances, the SBA uses program 
                                                 
116 P.L. 106-50, Section 402 and 15 U.S.C. §636(c). 
117 SBA, “Disaster Assistance Program: SOP 50-30-7,” May 13, 2011, p. 152, at https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/
files/sops/SOP%2050%2030%207.pdf. 
118 13 C.F.R. §123.513. 
119 SBA, Office of Congressional and Legislative Affairs, “Correspondence with the authors,” January 13, 2017, 
January 10, 2018, August 27, 2019, and March, 2021. In FY2011, the SBA disbursed 10 MREIDL loans amounting to 
$1.15 million. In FY2012, the SBA disbursed seven MREIDL loans amounting to $834,300. In FY2013, the SBA 
disbursed three MREIDL loans amounting to $121,200.  
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performance measures that focus on indicators that are primarily output related, such as the 
number and 
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SBA Veterans Assistance Programs: An Analysis of Contemporary Issues 
 
amount of loans approved for VOSBs and the number and amount of federal contracts awarded to 
SDVOSBs. 
Both GAO and the SBA’s Office of Inspector General have recommended that the SBA adopt 
more outcome-related performance measures for the SBA’s loan guaranty programs, such as 
tracking the number of borrowers that remain in business after receiving a SBA guaranteed loan 
to measure the extent to which the SBA contributed to their ability to stay in business.120 Other 
performance-oriented measures that Congress might also consider include requiring the SBA to 
survey veterans who participate in its business development programs or who have received a 
SBA guaranteed loan. This survey could provide information related to the difficulty the veterans 
experienced in obtaining a loan from the private sector, their experiences with the SBA’s loan 
application process, and the role the SBA loan had in creating or retaining jobs. The SBA could 
also survey SDVOSBs that were awarded a federal contract to determine the extent to which the 
SBA was instrumental in their receiving the award and the extent to which the award contributed 
to their ability to create jobs or expand their scope of operations. 
 
 
Author Information 
 
Robert Jay Dilger 
  Anthony A. Cilluffo 
Senior Specialist in American National Government  Analyst in Public Finance 
    
    
 
 
 
Disclaimer 
This document was prepared by the Congressional Research Service (CRS). CRS serves as nonpartisan 
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under the direction of Congress. Information in a CRS Report should not be relied upon for purposes other 
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copy or otherwise use copyrighted material. 
 
                                                 
120 GAO, Small Business Administration: 7(a) Loan Program Needs Additional Performance Measures, GAO-08-
226T, November 1, 2007, p. 2, http://www.gao.gov/new.items/d08226t.pdf; and SBA, Office of the Inspector General, 
SBA’s Administration of the Microloan Program under the Recovery Act, December 28, 2009, pp. 6, 7, at 
https://www.sba.gov/content/rom-10-10-sbas-administration-microloan-program-under-recovery-act. 
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