HR-7401-119
Motion to reconsider laid on the table Agreed to without objection.
Sponsored by Daniel Meuser (R-PA)
What it does
This bill would require Small Business Administration (SBA) employees who are involved in originating, reviewing, or approving SBA loans to sign a written certification — before participating in any loan decision — stating that they have no conflict of interest, that they will disclose any conflict that arises afterward, and that they understand the conflict-of-interest rules that apply to them. The SBA would be required to issue regulations to implement these new certification requirements.
Who benefits
Small business owners applying for SBA loans, who would gain a stronger procedural guarantee that loan decisions are made impartially. Taxpayers, who bear the risk of SBA loan defaults and would benefit from reduced fraud and self-dealing. Honest SBA loan applicants who may currently lose out to applicants with insider connections. Whistleblowers and oversight bodies, who would have a clearer paper trail to identify misconduct. Small businesses in underserved or rural communities that may be disproportionately harmed by favoritism in lending decisions.
Who is hurt
SBA employees who would face new administrative burdens and potential legal liability for certifications. Agency administrators who would bear the cost of drafting, implementing, and enforcing new regulations. Applicants who currently benefit — knowingly or unknowingly — from relationships with SBA employees involved in their loan decisions. Potentially, loan processing speed could slow if certification steps add procedural layers, affecting all applicants who need timely decisions.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the SBA administers hundreds of billions of dollars in loan programs — including over $800 billion disbursed through pandemic-era programs — and that documented fraud and conflicts of interest have cost taxpayers significantly. They contend that a written pre-participation certification creates a concrete, enforceable accountability mechanism that goes beyond existing disclosure rules, which require disclosure only after a conflict is identified, and that this added layer of affirmative attestation deters misconduct before it occurs.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that federal employees are already subject to comprehensive conflict-of-interest disclosure and recusal requirements under existing law (18 U.S.C. § 208 and related regulations), making this bill largely duplicative of existing obligations. They contend that adding a mandatory written certification layer creates bureaucratic overhead that may slow loan processing for small businesses that depend on timely access to capital, without meaningfully reducing fraud beyond what current enforcement mechanisms already address.