EPISODE · May 17, 2021 · 17 MIN
PPP Loans Were Meant to Help Businesses, But Many in Bay Area Communities of Color Didn’t Get Them
from The Bay · host KQED
On International Boulevard in East Oakland, just 5% of businesses received Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) loans from April to August of 2020. Meanwhile, in the nearby, mostly white neighborhood of Montclair, 49% of businesses received a PPP loan. Advocates and small business owners point to factors like language barriers, a complicated application process, and a legacy of banks not serving communities of color. This kind of disparity exists all over the Bay Area, and as the region reopens, this unequal distribution of loans will have lasting impacts. Guest: Adhiti Bandlamudi, KQED Silicon Valley reporter This story was reported in partnership with Reveal and the Center for Investigative Reporting. Episode transcript here: https://bit.ly/3ogBs6N. Subscribe to our newsletter here. Follow The Bay to hear more local Bay Area stories like this one. New episodes are released Monday, Wednesday and Friday at 3 a.m. Find The Bay on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, NPR One or via Alexa. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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PPP Loans Were Meant to Help Businesses, But Many in Bay Area Communities of Color Didn’t Get Them
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