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The Administration strongly supports reauthorization of the programs of the 
Small Business Administration and supports Senate passage of S. 1139, with the 
changes described below.  The bill reauthorizes small business loan programs 
which assist tens of thousands of small businesses each year and contribute to 
the overall vitality of our economy.   The Administration also supports the 
increase in the government-wide small business participation goal in federal 
contracting from 20 to 23 percent, following a phase-in period and in 
conjunction with the elimination of the Small Business Competitiveness 
Demonstration Program. 
 
However, the Administration strongly opposes the bill's changes to current law 
on "contract bundling," as well as extension of the Small Business 
Competitiveness Demonstration Program and creation of the "HUB Zone" program.  
The Administration will seek amendments to address these and other concerns as 
addressed below.
 
Contract Bundling.  The Administration is committed to maintaining a 
strong role for small businesses in Federal contracting, but is concerned that 
the proposed changes to the current law contract bundling provisions could deny 
taxpayers the cost savings and improved quality achievable by appropriate 
consolidation of Federal contract requirements.  Therefore, the Administration 
urges the Senate to maintain current law, which provides sufficient authority 
and flexibility for the Administration to protect the important interests of 
small businesses.
 
Small Business Competitiveness Demonstration Program.  The 
Administration strongly opposes any extension of the Small Business 
Competitiveness Demonstration Program.  Small businesses will substantially 
benefit from discontinuing this program and lifting the unnecessary paperwork 
and reporting burdens it imposes.  Moreover, the Administration believes that 
if this demonstration program is not allowed to terminate as scheduled, S. 
1139's small business participation goal will be extremely difficult to achieve.
 
HUBZones.  The Administration strongly supports new efforts to promote 
economic development in the Nation's distressed urban and rural communities.  
The bill's HUB Zones provision, however, could weaken one of the strongest 
tools for achieving this objective by according the proposed program a 
contracting priority equal to that of the 8(a) program.  
 
The Administration has already proposed regulations and is ready to begin 
pilots for the Empowerment Contracting Program (ECP), a new contracting program 
targeted at distressed communities.  The Administration believes that these 
tests should be permitted to proceed, and that they will demonstrate the  ECP's 
ability to accomplish the goals of the HUB Zones provisions at less expense and 
without affecting the 8(a) program.
 
Other Administration Concerns
 
The Administration will also seek amendments to:
 
- Remove proposed restrictions on the SBA's ability to use Women's Business 
Center funding to finance the costs of administering the program.  Removal of 
these restrictions is important to ensuring the effective execution of this 
program.
  - Maintain the ability of Small Business Development Centers (SBDCs) to 
charge appropriate fees for counseling services provided under the program.
  - Authorize sufficient  microloan technical assistance funding to support the 
projected growth in this program. 
  - Reauthorize the Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) Program for three 
years, rather than six. The three-year authorization proposed by the 
Administration is consistent with the authorization period for the companion 
Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Program, and provides a reasonable 
period for both achieving and evaluating program results.
  - Delete the proposed pilot program targeting technical assistance to certain 
States.
 This provision would divert scarce resources needed to administer the STTR and 
SBIR programs.
  
Pay-As-You-Go Scoring
S. 1139 would increase direct spending; therefore it is subject to the 
pay-as-you-go requirement of the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1990.  
OMB's preliminary scoring estimates of this bill are presented in the table 
below.  Final scoring of this legislation may differ from these estimates.
 
 
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