The U.S. Small Business Administration has partnered with the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs to improve access to funding and training for veterans looking to start a business.
SBA Administrator Isabel Casillas Guzman announced the signing of a memorandum of understanding between the SBA’s Office of Veterans Business Development and the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) Veterans Benefits Administration Monday.
The partnership will improve access to self-employment assistance and SBA training and counseling for active-duty service members and service-disabled veterans participating in the Veteran Readiness & Employment Program (VR&E), also known as Chapter 31, SBA said. The MOU will run through June 17, 2028.
“This agreement further strengthens coordination between the SBA and VA and will enable countless more veterans to access the capital and resources they need to start, build, and grow their businesses,” Guzman said in a statement.
“Under the Biden-Harris Administration, the SBA continues to deliver a strong record of supporting veterans, including increasing the number of Veterans Business Outreach Centers and creating greater access to federal contracts,” Guzman said. “This new agreement builds on the President’s ongoing commitment to help veterans pursue the American Dream of business ownership.”
Robert Yannuzzi, assistant administrator for the SBA’s Office of Veterans Business Development said SBA is proud to sign this MOU with the VA, which gives both agencies more opportunity to maximize resources and help VR&E program participants find entrepreneurship opportunities.
“SBA resources have helped many veterans and service members start or expand successful small businesses that contribute to local and national economies. We are eager to continue this work and help guide VR&E participants in pursuit of their piece of the American dream,” Yannuzzi said.
The SBA and VA will collaborate to hold joint training sessions, information sessions, and individual group training to train staff on the VR&E program as well as SBA resources to advance and expand appropriate self-employment opportunities for Chapter 31 participants, SBA said.
Through SBA’s OVBD, Chapter 31 participants will have increased access to SBA resources nationwide, such as 28 Veterans Business Outreach Centers (VBOC) that will be expanding to 31 VBOCs this year, 68 District Offices, and other local resource partners like SCORE, Small Business Development Centers (SBDC), and Women’s Business Centers (WBC).
SBA said these organizations will help participants get entrepreneurship training, learn new skills, and evaluate their business plans to start and grow a small business.
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