By Jim Garamone
American Forces Press Service
WASHINGTON, April 15, 2014 – The new administrator of the
Small Business Administration came to the Pentagon today to meet with service
members enrolled in her agency’s “Boots to Business” program.
Maria Contreras-Sweet, who took office April 7, is the voice
of American small businesses at home and abroad. She spoke to a new class of 17
airmen and three sailors who are transitioning out of the services.
The administrator told the service members enrolled in the
program that she wants to ensure those who defend the country also get a chance
to prosper.
She spoke of her time leading California’s Business,
Transportation and Housing Agency. When her agency was letting contracts, she
said, she always asked how much of the work was going to veteran-owned
companies. “There’s no point in getting people ready for business and then not
giving them the opportunity to do the business,” she said, “particularly with
the government that they fought so hard to defend.”
Contreras-Sweet recalled giving a speech to veterans in
California. She walked in to the auditorium and met vets who had lost limbs,
yet who were still striving to contribute to the nation. “It really affected
me, and this is why you are so important to me,” she said. “You are really on
the front lines.”
The Boots to Business program is a way for service members
to move into business. The SBA works with DOD to ensure service members
approach the program with open eyes.
The SBA helps veteran entrepreneurs with access to capital,
helps with counselling and helps to ensure “you have access to your Uncle Sam,”
she told the class. Nike, FedEx, Proctor & Gamble and Chik-Fil-A, she
noted, all are companies started by veterans.
The administrator said she wants her agency to be a good
wingman to the veterans as they begin their businesses, and she promised to do
all she could to help their businesses get off the ground and grow. “I want the
SBA to have a long-term relationship with you,” she said. “And I want you to
tell me if something works or doesn’t work. I wanted to hear from you directly
about how the SBA can do more and how we can do better.”
Many military skills can translate to civilian jobs,
Contreras-Sweet said, and she wants military personnel to understand “that your
service has given you unique qualifications to lead, and leadership is the holy
grail of entrepreneurship.”
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