Restaurants & Bars
Vestavia Restaurants Receive Restaurant Revitalization Funds
Restaurants in Vestavia received more than $2 million, but thousands were shut out of the SBA program, which ended Wednesday.
VESTAVIA HILLS, AL — Restaurants in Vestavia were among the nearly 900 in Alabama who received money from the Small Business Administration's Restaurant Revitalization Fund, which was passed by Congress last year as part of a sweeping coronavirus relief package.
A total of $94.7 million in funding was given to Alabama restaurants. But the 886 Alabama businesses that received funding under the program were just 29 percent of the 3,077 that applied to the program, which SBA is shutting down Wednesday.
In Vestavia Hills, grants were given to:
Find out what's happening in Vestavia Hillsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
- Jack Browns Joint Development Partners LLC: $652,315.29
- Downtown Southwest Grill: $320,576.55
- Klinglers Inc.: $264,165.00
- Bridge Street Southwest Grill: $173,367.81
- Riverchase Southwest Grill: $123,097.43
- MJR LLC: $107,163.37
- Wildwood Southwest Grill: $106,147.40
But restaurants across the country are facing an uncertain future after the U.S. Small Business Administration said last month it was shutting down the Restaurant Revitalization Fund passed by Congress as part of the coronavirus relief package.
“For a hundred thousand restaurants, the R.R.F. has made their future clear and stable, but for the more than 200,000 operators shut out of funding, receiving this letter today only heightens their fear and anger,” Sean Kennedy, a spokesman for the National Restaurant Association, told The New York Times. “We need Congress to act.”
Find out what's happening in Vestavia Hillsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
In an email to applicants last month, the SBA said the program will be "disabled" July 14. At that time, it will stop accepting applications. Nationally, the program has handed out grants to 105,000 restaurants, but another 265,000 applicants are still waiting. A bill to replenish the fund has been introduced in Congress, but it has not moved forward.
Despite restaurant industry lobbying for Congress to replenish the fund, lawmakers have been more focused on reaching a compromise on the Biden administration's infrastructure improvement bill.
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