Title 15 › Chapter 14B— SMALL BUSINESS INVESTMENT PROGRAM › Subchapter V— LOANS TO STATE AND LOCAL DEVELOPMENT COMPANIES › § 697g
The Administration can give certain state or local development companies the power to foreclose on and sell defaulted loans that were made with money from debentures it guaranteed. To get that power, a company must either have been in an earlier pilot program, be in the Premier Certified Lenders Program, or have averaged at least 10 such loans per year during the 3 fiscal years before asking. The company must also have at least one employee with at least 2 years of hands-on decision-making experience in loan workouts and liquidations who finished the Administration’s training, or the company must hire an approved outside contractor. The Administration will check a company’s qualifications on request and must tell the company why it is not eligible. With the power, a company can carry out liquidation and foreclosure work, buy other debts tied to the same property (with the agency’s approval), handle or defend related lawsuits (while the agency can step in if needed), and restructure loans through approved workout plans. The company must send liquidation plans, requests to buy other debt, or workout plans to the Administration. The Administration must approve or reject each within 15 business days or send a written notice saying why it needs more time, how much more time, and any missing information. Companies may do routine actions not in a plan without extra approval but must avoid conflicts of interest. The Administration can suspend or revoke the power if the company stops meeting rules, breaks laws or regulations, or fails to report. Each year the Administration must report to the House and Senate Small Business Committees on all delegated cases, including for each loan and for each company the project cost, original guaranteed amount, loan amount when acted on, total losses, total recoveries and recovery percentages, totals for all loans, a 12‑month comparison with Administration-handled cases, and any missed 15‑day decisions and the reasons.
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Commerce and Trade — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
15 U.S.C. § 697g
Title 15 — Commerce and Trade
Last Updated
Apr 3, 2026
Release point: 119-73not60