The City of Tucson Mayor and Council have allocated over $11.6 million to struggling small businesses during the course of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Congress passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief and Economic Security Act, which allowed for each state to receive a minimum of $1.25 billion. Tucson’s population made the city eligible for a direct allocation of $95.6 million, with $11.6 million going directly to small business and nonprofit continuity grants.
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Barbra Coffee is the Director of Economic Initiatives for the City of Tucson and helped lead weekly webinars for small business owners to guide them through the financial difficulties of the pandemic.
“Part of the instructions from the federal government was to utilize those funds to support small businesses during this challenging time,” Coffee said. “We quickly began to look at what we can do to support businesses that were impacted by the forced closures and changes in business hours.”
According to Coffee, many of the smaller and more vulnerable businesses were unable to receive funding as quickly as others that already had banking relationships in Tucson. Mayor Regina Romero and the Tucson City Council worked to make sure these businesses were still getting the help they needed to remain open.
“We created some eligibility criteria to give preference to those businesses that were women and minority-owned and businesses that were owned by veterans or disabled persons,” Coffee said. “With that we were able to help folks access their share to help them through this really trying time where businesses were losing 70 to 80 percent of their revenue almost overnight.”
Steve Kozachik is the Ward 6 council member and has worked with the rest of the Tucson City Council over the course of the pandemic to allocate funds to small businesses and nonprofit organizations.
“Anywhere you see outdoor seating that’s out on the sidewalks, that’s as a result of the easing of the regulations and also putting some cash into their pocket to help buy furniture, because it’s not like they had that in storage just waiting to be put outdoors,” Kozachik said.
Tucson’s businesses had to scramble in order to quickly adapt to the pandemic’s new rules. Outdoor seating and to-go orders were…
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