S-4532-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Small Business and Entrepreneurship.
Sponsored by Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV)
What it does
This bill would amend the Small Business Act to add "smoke" to the existing statutory definition of "disaster." This single change would make small businesses affected by wildfire smoke — even without direct fire damage — eligible for SBA disaster loan programs. No new funding is appropriated; the bill expands eligibility within the existing SBA disaster loan framework.
Who benefits
Small businesses in wildfire-prone regions (particularly the Western U.S.) that suffer economic losses from smoke events without sustaining direct fire damage — such as restaurants, tourism operators, outdoor recreation businesses, retail shops, and agricultural operations. Businesses in communities downwind of wildfires that experience reduced foot traffic or forced closures due to air quality. SBA-approved lenders who would see an expanded pool of eligible borrowers. Rural and small-town economies heavily dependent on outdoor industries.
Who is hurt
The SBA disaster loan fund could face increased demand, potentially straining program capacity or lengthening processing times for all applicants — including those affected by other disaster types. Taxpayers bear the risk of increased loan defaults if smoke-affected businesses cannot repay. Businesses in non-smoke-affected disaster areas may face slower service if program resources are stretched. Private lenders who currently serve smoke-affected businesses outside the SBA program may lose some market share.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that wildfire smoke causes measurable, documented economic harm to small businesses — including forced closures, lost revenue, and health-related customer avoidance — that is functionally identical to damage from other recognized disasters. They contend that the current definition creates an arbitrary gap: a business destroyed by fire qualifies for SBA relief, but a neighboring business shuttered for weeks by hazardous smoke does not, even though both suffer comparable financial losses. Western states have experienced record-breaking smoke events in recent years, and small businesses in those regions have no comparable federal recovery mechanism.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that "smoke" is a diffuse, difficult-to-define phenomenon that could dramatically expand SBA disaster loan eligibility in ways that are hard to administer and verify — unlike physical damage from fire, flood, or wind, which can be assessed and documented. They contend that broadening the definition without additional funding or eligibility guardrails risks overwhelming the SBA's disaster loan program, potentially delaying relief for businesses affected by more acute, physically destructive disasters. Critics may also argue that smoke-related economic losses are better addressed through business interruption insurance markets rather than federal loan programs.