Small-business advocates are calling on the federal government to extend the March 31 deadline to apply for a loan from the Paycheck Protection Program, citing recent changes made to the program and delays in processing applications.

“Time is not on our side. These businesses need a little more help, and they’re willing to do the work,” Hilda Kennedy, president of the PPP lender AmPac Business Capital, said Wednesday during a House Small Business Committee hearing focused on the future of the program.

Ms. Kennedy was speaking of the very smallest firms, such as those owned by sole proprietors. “We need more time to serve them,” she added.

As of March 7, the Small Business Administration had approved 2.4 million loans totaling roughly $165 billion, or nearly 60% of available funds, for loans to first-time and returning borrowers under the reopened program, according to agency data. Lenders issue the loans, and the SBA guarantees them.

Advocates say a deadline extension would give lenders more time to implement the administration’s recently announced changes and inform small businesses about how the revisions could benefit them.

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Warehouse Bottlenecks Are Snarling U.S. Supply Chains

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use…

Watching Zelenskyy’s ‘Servant of the People’ satire on Netflix as Ukraine burns

Last Wednesday, 9 a.m. local time on the East Coast, Volodymyr Zelenskyy,…

U.S. Companies Say They Are Monitoring Impact of Russia-Ukraine Crisis

U.S. businesses operating in Russia and Ukraine are putting in place contingency…

Felicity Huffman says she feels ‘undying shame’ for falsifying daughter’s SAT score in first interview since scandal

Actor Felicity Huffman said that she is left with “undying shame” that…