Since the Paycheck Protection Program’s (PPP) launch in early April, Grand Rapids State Bank has approved over $17.8 million in desperately needed liquidity for 181 businesses disrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic.
Grand Rapids State Bank provided 23.2 percent of its PPP loans to customers who could not otherwise access PPP funding through their large bank or credit union relationship. The bank’s PPP loans to current and new customers of Grand Rapids State Bank preserved about 2,050 jobs at businesses in the Grand Rapids area.
The staff of Grand Rapids State Bank worked – sometimes around the clock – during April to help customers secure aid. “At Grand Rapids State, our employees were willing to make sacrifices to help our customers,” said Noah Wilcox, President & CEO of Grand Rapids State Bank. “I could not be more proud of what our team accomplished in support of our local economy. Each PPP loan represents tens, or even hundreds, of jobs preserved in this time of crisis.”
According to the Small Business Administration, community banks approved about 60 percent of first-round PPP loans. Nationally, banks under $1 billion – a group that represents just 6 percent of all banking assets – provided their communities with nearly 20 percent of first-round PPP loan dollars.
In Minnesota, more than 83,650 small businesses received a total of $11.2 billion in PPP funding as of May 1 from SBA-approved lenders, the agency reported. “Community banks are coming out the heroes of the program in terms of coming online to serve their local economies, for responsiveness to borrowers, and for the number of loans [relative to their size],” said Brian McDonald, the Acting SBA District Director for Minnesota. “Small businesses are benefiting from Minnesota’s strong community banking sector and the lenders who are putting in long hours and submitting record quantities of SBA loans to help shore up their local economies.”
Community bankers also set aside competition and worked together to provide each other with needed information to bring PPP lending online. “During the week of April 6, I was on calls with bankers all day and every day as they prepared to help their customers,” said Jim Amundson, President & CEO of the Independent Community Bankers of Minnesota. “The focus was not on who would gain the most; it was on collaborating as an industry to provide aid as soon as possible.”
When Congress authorized the second round of $310 billion in PPP funding, it chose community banks as the exclusive provider for $60 billion. Congress reserved $30 billion of that amount for banks under $10 billion. “Congress recognized that community banks had proven to be the most dependable PPP providers for the small businesses,” Amundson said. “They stood in the gap for our country’s small businesses while the largest banks were turning them away.”
The second round of the Paycheck Protection Program is available until June 30 or until funding is exhausted. As of May 8, about $122.9 billion remains available.