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Sue Dorsey: Colorado’s overlooked small businesses still have time to grab a lifeline

We heard panic from our community lending partners almost immediately as the COVID-19 pandemic began forcing closures.

The smallest local businesses were falling through the cracks. As the first round of $349 billion in federal Paycheck Protection Program loans ran dry in just two weeks, we were meeting with state officials and fellow funders to sound the alarm that these businesses were being overlooked, and exploring how we might develop and support Colorado solutions that would specifically address their needs.

The Energize Colorado Gap Fund is one result – starting in early August, Colorado’s sole proprietors, businesses and nonprofits with fewer than 25 full-time employees can apply for grants of up to $15,000 and loans of up to $20,000, for a combined maximum of $35,000 in financial assistance. Priority will be given to rural businesses and those owned by women, veterans and/or BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and People of Color). The Fund is designed to keep low-cost capital flowing in communities across Colorado as federal stimulus programs like the PPP wind down.

Another silver lining for small businesses: While the Aug. 8 deadline for PPP applications is fast approaching and many traditional banks have stopped accepting applications, Colorado’s three SBA-approved nonprofit lenders – DreamSpring, Colorado Enterprise Fund and Colorado Lending Source – still have money in the bank and stand ready with Zoom windows open to serve the state’s smallest and most vulnerable businesses, and help position them to recover and rebuild.

These three trusted nonprofit lenders have a successful track record of working with underserved business owners across the state. They provide affordable loans and other financial services, and the training and technical resources to ensure successful repayment and long-term sustainability.

Since April, these three nonprofit lenders have made PPP loans to 1,593 small local businesses, totaling more than $45 million and protecting the jobs of more than 6,850 Coloradans. More than half of these businesses are minority-, women-, or veteran-owned, and the average size of the loans is less than $30,000. The loans are completely forgivable as long as certain parameters such as employee retention are met.

Early Success Academy, an early learning center in Denver’s Montbello neighborhood, is just one example of how previously overlooked businesses are now gaining access to the PPP program. Owner Diana Gadison came to the Colorado Enterprise Fund for help after her first PPP application submitted through a mainstream bank was denied. In 1995, CEF provided Gadison with her first $10,000 loan to open her business – and came through this time as well. “We now have the funds to reopen in 30 days with all nine employees still on board,” Gadison told us. “The rent will be paid, and health insurance is intact with no interruption in benefits.”

Gadison’s story is not uncommon. Kelly Watters, a co-founder of Western Rise, an apparel manufacturer based in Telluride, was turned away from seven different lenders before securing a PPP loan through Colorado Lending Source. A PPP loan from DreamSpring helped Lisa and David Jacobson of Gunnison not only keep 20 employees on the payroll at their 16-year-old family restaurant, The Gunnisack, but also pay them about 25% extra during closure. In a town with just 6,500 residents, that makes a difference.

For those of us who are frustrated by the institutional inequities that plague our state’s BIPOC communities and underserved business owners, it is gratifying that Colorado’s nonprofit lenders were able to participate in the second round of PPP loans. Behind the scenes, this took some wrangling – including direct commitments of capital and a creative bit of financing supported by multiple local foundations, the state of Colorado and FirstBank Colorado.

With a turnaround time of less than a week, Gates Family Foundation worked with the state’s Office of Economic Development and International Trade, Gary Community Investments and AJL Foundation to use the strength of their balance sheets and FirstBank’s capital to ensure that federal stimulus dollars reached the smallest and least banked businesses across the state. In addition, other funders – including Zoma, the Colorado Health Foundation and Bohemian Foundation – advanced capital independently toward the same end.

If women, people of color and veteran-owned businesses had equitable access to capital across the board, creative interventions like these wouldn’t be needed. But what we learned was also important: When we work together with a shared mission to better serve our state’s overlooked but strong small-business owners, we can help make sure support gets to the right places.

We salute Colorado’s nonprofit lenders for their overwhelming responsiveness, and encourage Colorado’s small-business owners to contact them to take advantage of the federal PPP program by Aug. 8 – and to apply for grants and support through the Energize Colorado Gap Fund in early August.

Sue Dorsey is senior vice president of finance, administration and impact investing for the Denver-based Gates Family Foundation and serves on the executive committee of Energize Colorado.



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