S-2232-119
Passed Senate with an amendment by Unanimous Consent.
Sponsored by Edward Markey (D-MA)
What it does
This bill would raise the maximum contract value eligible for a Small Business Administration (SBA) surety bond guarantee from $6.5 million to $18 million. It would also allow up to 2% of the SBA's surety bond revolving fund to cover program administrative costs each fiscal year, add a temporary reduction mechanism that lowers the bond limit by 33% if the SBA requests supplemental funding from Congress, and require annual SBA reports and a one-time Government Accountability Office (GAO) study on program efficiency and paperwork burdens.
Who benefits
Small businesses — particularly minority-owned, women-owned, and emerging contractors — that bid on federal, state, and local government contracts above $6.5 million but below $18 million, who previously could not access SBA-backed bond guarantees. Surety companies participating in the program, who would gain a larger eligible market. General contractors and government agencies that would have a broader pool of small business bidders on larger projects. Taxpayers and oversight bodies benefit from the new annual reporting and GAO review requirements.
Who is hurt
Larger, established contractors who currently face less small-business competition on contracts in the $6.5M–$18M range may face increased competition. Surety companies outside the SBA program that compete with guaranteed sureties could see market share shift. If the revolving fund becomes strained and the SBA requests supplemental funds, the 33% limit reduction would temporarily restrict access for small businesses seeking bonds on larger contracts. Taxpayers bear residual risk if the revolving fund experiences higher-than-expected claims.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the $6.5 million cap has not been updated in years and no longer reflects the scale of modern government contracts, effectively locking small businesses out of a growing segment of the market. They contend that raising the limit to $18 million would expand opportunities for small and disadvantaged businesses — groups that historically struggle to obtain bonding without federal backing — while the built-in 33% reduction trigger and new reporting requirements protect the revolving fund's fiscal health and ensure congressional oversight.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that nearly tripling the guarantee ceiling significantly increases the federal government's contingent liability exposure if small business contractors default on larger, more complex projects they may lack the capacity to complete. They contend that the 2% administrative cost carve-out and the expanded bond ceiling could strain the revolving fund's deficit-neutral design, and that the self-reported attestation mechanism — rather than independent verification — may be insufficient to trigger the protective 33% reduction before financial damage occurs.