Dec 31, 2020
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (AP) As an initial deadline passed Wednesday for South Dakota’s $450 million grant program to help small businesses upended by the pandemic, fewer than 20% of nearly 6,000 applicants have seen any money.
The deadline has been extended by the federal government, but some business owners expressed frustration at what they described as snags in the application process and a monthslong wait for the grants.
The grant program is a cornerstone of Republican Gov. Kristi Noem’s plan to spend $1.25 billion in federal coronavirus money, sending nearly a third to small businesses, startups and nonprofits that can show they have been hurt financially by the pandemic. But from bed and breakfasts in Sioux Falls to rodeo operators in Pierre, business owners have been left waiting for word on relief as they try to adapt to the economic uncertainty and shape plans for next year.
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Business owners frustrated at pace of coronavirus grants
by Stephen Groves, The Associated Press
Posted Dec 30, 2020 4:19 pm EDT
Last Updated Dec 30, 2020 at 4:28 pm EDT
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. As an initial deadline passed Wednesday for South Dakota’s $450 million grant program to help small businesses upended by the pandemic, fewer than 20% of nearly 6,000 applicants have seen any money.
The deadline has been extended by the federal government, but some business owners expressed frustration at what they described as snags in the application process and a monthslong wait for the grants.
The grant program is a cornerstone of Republican Gov. Kristi Noem’s plan to spend $1.25 billion in federal coronavirus money, sending nearly a third to small businesses, startups and nonprofits that can show they have been hurt financially by the pandemic. But from bed and breakfasts in Sioux Falls to rodeo operators in Pierre, business owners have been left waiting for word on relief as they t
gvogrin@tribtoday.com
WARREN A Mecca couple involved in a Bazetta crash in late 2018 are suing their insurance company for not honoring an uninsured motorist claim.
Amy and Michael Haskett of 4005 Greenville Road have initiated a civil action against Allstate Fire and Casualty of Northbrook, Ill. The case, which was filed this week in Trumbull County Common Pleas Court, was assigned to Judge W. Wyatt McKay.
According to the lawsuit, a car driven on Dec. 21, 2018, by Joshua L. Holmes went left of center, striking the Haskett’s southbound vehicle, causing it to go off state Route 5 into a ditch.
The lawsuit identified Holmes as an unlicensed and uninsured driver who was deemed negligent in the police report.