KEYNOTE ADDRESS
by the
Honorable Nydia M. Velázquez
U.S. Chamber of Commerce in New York City
June 10, 2002
Thank you for inviting me here today. I especially
want to thank everyone for choosing New York for this annual
conference, and showing your solidarity with this great
city.
It is a great honor to speak with you today.
This is a critical time for small businesses. As our economy
regains momentum after a shallow recession, and as we seek
to create new jobs, innovations and opportunities, small
businesses can be a powerful engine to push us forward.
Small companies produce half our economic
output, employ nearly half our workers and create 75 percent
of all new jobs. They lit the fuse that set off the long
boom of the 1990s. So at this moment, when our economy needs
a little juice from small businesses, it is most important
to do what we can for them.
This is not self-evident to a lot of people in Washington.
Democrats often do not appreciate what small
businesses bring to the economy. They approach many challenges
from the point of view of the employee, rather than from
the employer that creates those jobs.
Republicans tend to see only major corporations
as the prime mover of the nation's economy. For example,
in response to September 11, the House leadership moved
quickly to protect the airlines and the insurance companies.
While this was the right thing to do, the unique needs and
powerful potential of small businesses were ignored. Many
are still hurting. They need grants --- not just loans ---
and we should use the rebuilding process in Manhattan as
an economic tool to strengthen them as well.
Educating lawmakers on these and other issues is the duty
of Members of the Small Business Committee. We understand
the unique importance of small businesses to expanding the
American Dream. There is no Democratic or Republican way
to help small businesses. So we check our ideologies at
the door, sit down together --- and then get to work.
We know that federal law and regulations discriminate
against small businesses --- because those laws and regulations
are written as one-size-fits-all.
The best example of this is the tax code. Talk about unfair!
It is far more regressive toward small businesses. In fact,
last year's major tax cut ignored half of all small businesses
that simply didn't qualify.
Another example of tax discrimination is the
meal deduction. The Internal Revenue Code restricts the
self-employed to 50 percent of meals on the road instead
of a per diem. This rule requires small business people
to keep those records while traveling --- a petty demand
not made of corporate executives. This should change.
The reason we spend so much time discussing
the tax code is that this inequitable and overly burdensome
system drains valuable funds out of a business that could
be reinvested. As a result, small businesses must seek capital
infusions from other sources.
Clearly, access to capital is access to opportunity.
But securing these financial resources is a constant challenge.
An important source of accessible, affordable
capital continues to be the Small Business Administration
loan programs. These programs provide 40 percent of ALL
long-term lending to small businesses. SBA's largest program
--- the 7(a) --- provided more than $10 billion in capital
last year alone.
One problem for both Republican and Democratic
Administrations has been an ongoing miscalculation of 7(a)
program costs. Last year, the General Accounting Office
verified my concern by reporting that both lenders and borrowers
were overcharged $1 billion during the last decade.
This is outrageous, but we got satisfaction.
Last year I was successful in cutting the 7(a) fees by 50
percent. But instead of stepping up to the plate and doing
the right thing, the Administration continues to play budgetary
games this year by proposing to cut the 7(a) program in
HALF. This could result in $5 billion LESS in lending opportunities.
The harm this will do to small businesses outweighs any
benefit we might see from a tax cut. It is time for both
lawmakers and Administration officials to recognize how
important SBA loan programs are and to give them the support
they deserve.
Access to capital is simply a means to an
end --- to get more work and grow a business. But another
way to expand enterprise is to tap into the $220 billion
federal marketplace. Unfortunately, this vast avenue of
opportunity remains blocked to small companies.
For three years now the Small Business Committee
Democrats have documented the decline of small business
contracting with the federal government. Last year alone,
federal agencies denied small companies $12.5 billion by
consolidating small bids into enormous mega-contracts won
by large corporations.
Government agencies believe these huge "mega"
contracts to save more than small businesses could ever
match.
They are just wrong. Small businesses actually do higher
quality, less expensive work due to lower overhead, smaller
profit margins, and better customer service. And federal
agencies have yet to show us a single dime saved from contract
consolidation.
I have two bipartisan proposals to break up
large contracts and help small businesses improve their
bidding chances, but they have been ignored by the Congressional
leadership.
The continuing lack of progress on these and
other small business concerns led me to issue an 11-point
agenda this February that Congress must address to keep
small businesses on the economic vanguard.
We made a little progress in March when the
President announced his small business agenda which highlighted
five of our issues. As we enter the home stretch for the
107th Congress, the need and urgency to address these issues
is greater than ever.
One of the biggest challenges facing small business is hiring
and retaining skilled trade workers. Even in this economy,
firms can't fill their shops with enough qualified people
to get the job done. At the same time, small businesses
provide six out of 10 American workers with their first
jobs. This means they must train most of those workers,
taking on added costs and burdens.
If small businesses are going to serve as
the de facto training ground for our workforce, then simple
fairness dictates that we must look for ways to help them
defer the costs.
That is what I have done working with Rep.
Mark Foley to introduce the Skilled Workforce Enhancement
Act. This initiative is designed to help companies meet
the labor shortfall by providing a tax credit of $15,000
per year, per employee, for four years in exchange for 1,500
hours of training each year.
By providing small businesses with a means
to secure a well-trained workforce, their productivity and
profitability will increase. That is why when you talk to
any small business owner they will tell you their greatest
resource is their employees.
Unfortunately, after an owner spends thousands
of dollars and hundreds of hours on training, they often
watch in frustration as that investment walk out the door
for a larger corporation with better benefits.
The reason small businesses cannot offer comprehensive
employee benefits comparable to corporations is not because
they don't want to --- it is because the current system
makes it impossible.
We must help small companies keep their best
workers by making it easier and less expensive to offer
benefits like health insurance and pensions. That way, employees
will see their work less as a job and more of an investment
in their future.
Small businesses continue to struggle to find adequate,
affordable health care coverage for their employees. Today
25 million Americans without health insurance live in a
household with someone employed by a small business.
Cost is the number one reason why small businesses
do not provide health insurance for their workers. Health
costs are again on the rise --- for small businesses, 20
percent more than for larger corporations.
The solution is for small businesses to band
together to secure good prices for health insurance. Corporations
and unions do it. So do state governments. If it's good
enough for them, it's good enough for small businesses.
That's why we must pass The Small Business Health Fairness
Act to create Association Health Plans. AHPs could save
small businesses as much as 30 percent on health care costs.
Now, I want to do something here. I am going
to draw a line in the sand. I am going to say to you today
that Congress must enact Association Health Plans this year.
If there is one thing we can do for small businesses right
now, it is this. Congress must do it.
While health insurance is the first and foremost
concern for both employers and employees, as our population
ages the need for retirement security will grow. In fact,
by 2030, 20 percent of our workforce will be at retirement
age.
But only 46 percent of workers in firms with
fewer than 100 employees have pensions --- and that percentage
actually DROPS as the number of workers gets smaller. This
is because small businesses are at a disadvantage in offering
retirement benefits.
Congress enacted the SIMPLE plan and some tax incentives
to make pension planning more attractive, but challenges
to pensions remain. Tight qualification and vesting standards,
complexity, cost and liability fears stoked by the Enron
401(k) debacle all make small business owners less willing
to offer retirement benefits.
We need to provide GREATER incentives to encourage
small businesses to start plans. The system must be flexible
enough to allow the plan to evolve as businesses and the
workforce grow and change.
My concern over retirement security led me
to begin a dialogue with small businesses. Now, through
a series of roundtable discussions, we are working to introduce
a comprehensive small business pension bill this summer
that will allow every small business owner that wants to
offer retirement plans to do so.
Retirement plans, health benefits, taxes ---
these are the start but not the end of the small business
agenda. Small businesses have a big agenda, which means
we --- both Congress and the White House --- have a big
agenda, too.
This Congress started off with a great deal
of promise for small business. But with all the challenges
of the recession, terrorist attacks and the rebuilding efforts,
we have gotten off track --- and must return. As the 107th
Congress enters the home stretch, there is still time to
resolve many of these critical issues --- but it will certainly
not be easy. Once again the needs of small businesses are
crowded to the side during the annual appropriations process
and Congress is now focused on creating a new Department
of Homeland Security. The window is closing quickly ---
and if we allow that to happen we may look back at the 107th
Congress as one that promised much but delivered very little.
I know you believe as I do that small businesses
built this country. And clearly, small businesses will continue
to be the driving force of this economy. The entrepreneurial
spirit is what sets Americans apart from the rest of the
world --- in the words of Alexis de Tocqueville 200 years
ago, "boldness of enterprise is the foremost cause
of America's rapid progress, its strength, and its greatness".
As the Ranking Democrat on the Small Business
Committee I will continue to remind my colleagues of the
importance to small businesses and the need to enact a comprehensive
agenda. I look forward to working together with you to accomplish
that.
I want to thank you again for inviting me here, and I want
especially to thank you for your support of the greatest
city in the world --- New York City.