BlueSKy

You are here

Will we have to repay PPP loans?

Your Legal Questions Answered

Will we have to repay PPP loans?

Over 100 of our subordinate chapters have filed for and received Payroll Protection Program loans/grants. We advised them not to, but they are not subsidiaries and have a level of autonomy. What do you believe is the likelihood that the federal government will figure out that they should not have received the funds and claw them back?

I am not sure why you think the lodges were not entitled to the funds.  The eligibility requirements were minimal.  A nonprofit was eligible if it had 500 or fewer employees in its own entity and its “affiliates.”  In general, the Small Business Administration says affiliation exists when one organization has the power to control another, or both are under the control of a third party.  (The SBA published a special rule to exempt faith-based organizations from the affiliation rules.)  From your description of your relationship, it doesn’t sound as though it meets the definition of control or affiliation and I assume your lodges don’t employ more than 500 people in each one. 

The second requirement was a “good faith” certification that “current economic uncertainty makes this loan request necessary to support the ongoing operations of the Applicant.”  There was a lot of concern in the early days that some nonprofits, particularly grantmakers that had substantial reserve or endowment funds, didn’t “need” the money or shouldn’t take it when small businesses were in need.  In May, however, the SBA published a new question and answer (Question 46) on its Frequently Asked Questions page saying that it would give safe harbor protection to any applicant that received a loan of less than $2 million and would deem the required certification to have been made in good faith.  (It noted that borrowers of more than $2 million could prove the necessity for the loan if questioned.)

The SBA said that borrowers with loans below $2 million were “generally less likely to have had access to adequate sources of liquidity than borrowers of larger loans and that the safe harbor would promote economic certainty as PPP borrowers with more limited resources endeavor to retain and rehire employees.” SBA also noted that the safe harbor rule would enable the agency to conserve its finite audit resources.  That pronouncement has largely quieted the legal issue.

 

This question was originally published with reference to a 501(c)(8) organization, which is not included among the types of nonprofits (501(c)(3) and 501(c)(19)) which are eligible to apply for PPP loans.  The answer is accurate as to 501(c)(3)s and (c)(19)s.  I apologize for the error.

 

Tuesday, August 11, 2020

Comments

Could you offer your opinion on the original question, whether you think it is possible or likely that the government will seek to claw back PPP funds given to our subordinate 501(C)8 organizations. Thanks.

I doubt that the IRS will question the loan since the applicants have certified that they were all qualified organizations, unless someone complains and the IRS goes after all of the lodges at once.  Although the loan forgiveness form does not seem to ask for a re-certification of eligibility, I would recommend that the lodges pay off the loan according to its terms.  There is a penalty of perjury type certification on the application which would probably be ignored if the loan is repaid, but could be a basis for action if it is not and the IRS learns that there is a problem.

Add new comment

Sign-up for our weekly Q&A; get a free report on electioneering