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Women's Business Ownership Act of 1988

Introduced: July 14, 1988 See on congress.gov
 Everywhere this bill has been 20 steps
Introduced
In committee
Reported out
Passed House
Passed Senate
To President
Became law
Oct 25, 1988
Signed by President.
Oct 25, 1988
Became Public Law No: 100-533.
Oct 21, 1988
Presented to President.
Oct 20, 1988
Measure Signed in Senate.
Oct 12, 1988
Message on Senate action sent to the House.
Oct 12, 1988
House Agreed to Senate Amendments by Voice Vote.
Oct 12, 1988
Resolving differences -- House actions: House Agreed to Senate Amendments by Voice Vote.
Oct 11, 1988
Measure laid before Senate by unanimous consent.
Oct 11, 1988
Passed Senate with an amendment by Voice Vote.
Oct 11, 1988
Passed/agreed to in Senate: Passed Senate with an amendment by Voice Vote.
Oct 5, 1988
Received in the Senate, read twice.
Oct 3, 1988
Called up by House Under Suspension of Rules.
Oct 3, 1988
Passed House (Amended) by Yea-Nay Vote: 389 - 7 (Record Vote No: 385).
Oct 3, 1988
Passed/agreed to in House: Passed House (Amended) by Yea-Nay Vote: 389 - 7 (Record Vote No: 385).
Sep 22, 1988
Placed on Union Calendar No: 571.
Sep 22, 1988
Reported to House (Amended) by House Committee on Small Business. Report No: 100-955.
Aug 10, 1988
Ordered to be Reported.
Aug 10, 1988
Committee Consideration and Mark-up Session Held.
Jul 14, 1988
Referred to House Committee on Small Business.
Jul 14, 1988
Introduced in House
 Plain-English summary Congressional Research Service

Women's Business Ownership Act of 1988 - Title I: Congressional Findings and Purposes - Sets forth congressional findings and purposes with respect to small businesses owned and controlled by women.

Title II: Demonstration Projects - Amends the Small Business Act to direct the Small Business Administration (SBA) to provide financial assistance to private organizations to conduct demonstration projects giving financial, management, and marketing assistance to small businesses, including start-up businesses, owned and controlled by women. Describes application criteria. Requires the SBA to report to the congressional Small Business Committees on the projects. Terminates authority for this pilot program on October 1, 1991. Authorizes appropriations.

Title III: Procurement Assistance - Amends the Small Business Act to include small business concerns owned and operated by women as a discrete group for purposes of Government contracts and subcontracts and procurement programs. (Current law governing these programs refers expressly only to small business concerns and small business concerns owned and controlled by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals as groups targeted for assistance.)

Instructs the Director of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization of each Federal agency to designate a Women-in-Business Specialist to be responsible for programs designed to assist concerns owned and controlled by women.

Directs Federal agencies, in their procurement activities, to engage in affirmative action to identify and solicit offers from small businesses owned and controlled by either women or socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.

Title IV: Access to Capital - Amends the Consumer Credit Protection Act to prohibit the Federal Reserve Board, except under limited circumstances, from exempting from such Act's provisions any class of transactions that are primarily for personal, family, or household purposes, or business or commercial loans made available by a financial institution. Limits to five years any exemption authorized under the circumstances specified in this Act, unless a subsequent determination is made that the exemption remains appropriate.

Requires lenders to keep records relating to loans and to provide written notice to applicants of their right to receive notice of reasons for a loan denial.

Authorizes the SBA to establish a certified loan program for lenders that display knowledge and proficiency with respect to SBA regulations and programs. Directs the SBA to encourage small business loans of $50,000 or less under both this new program and the preferred lenders program in FY 1989 through 1991 by permitting participating lenders to: (1) use their own forms without regard to SBA paperwork; and (2) retain one-half of the loan guarantee fee. Requires SBA reporting to specified congressional committees in connection with the certified loan program.

Directs the Federal Reserve Board, the Comptroller of the Currency, the Department of Commerce, and the SBA jointly to study levels of availability of and demand for debt and equity capital by small businesses, as well as innovative financing techniques to meet any unmet demand. Requires reporting to the congressional Small Business Committees.

Title V: National Women's Business Council - Establishes the National Women's Business Council to review the status of women-owned businesses nationwide and to develop detailed multiyear plans in connection with both private and public sector actions to assist and promote such businesses. Requires annual reporting to both the President and the Congress.

Title VI: Statistical Data and Effect on Other Programs - Directs: (1) the Bureau of Labor Statistics to include in its census reports on women-owned businesses specified information on sole proprietorships, partnerships, and corporations; (2) the Bureau of the Census to include in its Business Census data the number of corporations that are 51 percent or more owned by women; (3) the SBA's Office of the Chief Counsel for Advocacy to report on the most cost-effective and accurate ways to gather and present the statistics required in these census reports; and (4) Federal agencies to report to the Office of Federal Procurement Policy the number of first-time contract recipients that are small businesses owned and controlled either by women or by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.

Requires the President's annual Report on Small Business and Competition to include in separate detail information relevant to small businesses owned and controlled either by women or by socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.

What's happening now October 25, 1988

Became Public Law No: 100-533.

 Committees of jurisdiction 1