
SBA 8(a) Certification
Facts
When do disadvantaged individuals
control an applicant or Participant.
Control is not the same as
ownership, although both may reside in the same person. SBA regards control as including
both the strategic policy setting exercised by boards of directors and the day-to-day
management and administration of business operations. An applicant or Participant's
management and daily business operations must be conducted by one or more disadvantaged
individuals, except for concerns owned by Indian tribes, ANCs, Native Hawaiian
Organizations, or Community Development Corporations (CDCs). Disadvantaged
individuals managing the concern must have managerial experience of the extent and
complexity needed to run the concern. A disadvantaged individual need not have the
technical expertise or possess a required license to be found to control an applicant or
Participant if he or she can demonstrate that he or she has ultimate managerial and
supervisory control over those who possess the required licenses or technical expertise.
However, where a critical license is held by a non-disadvantaged individual having an
equity interest in the applicant or Participant firm, the non-disadvantaged individual may
be found to control the firm.
(a)(1) An applicant or Participant must be managed on a full-time basis by one or more
disadvantaged individuals who possess requisite management capabilities.
(2) A disadvantaged full-time manager must hold the highest officer position (usually
President or Chief Executive Officer) in the applicant or Participant.
(3) One or more disadvantaged
individuals who manage the applicant or Participant must devote full-time to the business
during the normal working hours of firms in the same or similar line of business. Work in
a wholly-owned subsidiary of the applicant or participant may be considered to meet the
requirement of full-time devotion. This applies only to a subsidiary owned by the 8(a)
firm, and not to firms in which the disadvantaged individual has an ownership interest.
(4) Any disadvantaged manager who wishes to engage in outside employment must notify SBA
of the nature and anticipated duration of the outside employment and obtain the prior
written approval of SBA. SBA will deny a request for outside employment which could
conflict with the management of the firm or could hinder it in achieving the objectives of
its business development plan.
(5) Except as provided in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, a disadvantaged owner's unexercised right to cause a
change in the control or management of the applicant concern does not in itself constitute
disadvantaged control and management, regardless of how quickly or easily the right could
be exercised.
(b) In the case of a partnership, one or more disadvantaged individuals must serve as
general partners, with control over all partnership decisions. A partnership in which no
disadvantaged individual is a general partner will be ineligible for participation.
(c) In the case of a limited
liability company, one or more disadvantaged individuals must serve as management members,
with control over all decisions of the limited liability company.
(d) One or more disadvantaged
individuals must control the Board of Directors of a corporate applicant or Participant.
(1) SBA will deem disadvantaged individuals to control the Board of Directors where:
(i) A single disadvantaged individual owns 100% of all voting stock of an applicant or
Participant concern;
(ii) A single disadvantaged
individual owns at least 51% of all voting stock of an applicant or Participant concern,
the individual is on the Board of Directors and no super majority voting requirements
exist for shareholders to approve corporation actions. Where super majority voting
requirements are provided for in the concern's articles of incorporation, its by-laws, or
by state law, the disadvantaged individual must own at least the percent of the voting
stock needed to overcome any such super majority voting requirements; or
(iii) More than one disadvantaged shareholder seeks to qualify the concern (i.e., no one
individual owns 51%), each such individual is on the Board of Directors, together they own
at least 51% of all voting stock of the concern, no super majority voting requirements
exist, and the disadvantaged shareholders can demonstrate that they have made enforceable
arrangements to permit one of them to vote the stock of all as a block without a
shareholder meeting. Where the concern has super majority voting requirements, the
disadvantaged shareholders must own at least that percentage of voting stock needed to
overcome any such super majority ownership requirements.
(2) Where an applicant or Participant does not meet the requirements set forth in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section, the disadvantaged individual(s) upon whom eligibility is
based must control the Board of Directors through actual numbers of voting directors or,
where permitted by state law, through weighted voting (e.g., in a concern having a
two-person Board of Directors where one individual on the Board is disadvantaged and one
is not, the disadvantaged vote must be weighted--worth more than one vote--in order for
the concern to be eligible for 8(a) participation). Where a concern seeks to comply with
this paragraph:
(i) Provisions for the establishment of a quorum cannot permit non-disadvantaged Directors
to control the Board of Directors, directly or indirectly;
(ii) Any Executive Committee
of Directors must be controlled by disadvantaged directors unless the Executive Committee
can only make recommendations to and cannot independently exercise the authority of the
Board of Directors.
(3) An applicant must inform SBA of any super majority voting requirements provided for in
its articles of incorporation, its by-laws, by state law, or otherwise. Similarly, after
being admitted to the program, a Participant must inform SBA of changes regarding super
majority voting requirements.
(4) Non-voting, advisory, or
honorary Directors may be appointed without affecting disadvantaged individuals' control
of the Board of Directors.
(5) Arrangements regarding the
structure and voting rights of the Board of Directors must comply with applicable state
law.
(e) Non-disadvantaged individuals may be involved in the management of an applicant or
Participant, and may be stockholders, partners, limited liability members, officers,
and/or directors of the applicant or Participant. However, no such non-disadvantaged
individual or immediate family member may:
(1) Exercise actual control or have the power to control the applicant or Participant;
(2) Be a former employer or a
principal of a former employer of any disadvantaged owner of the applicant or Participant,
unless it is determined by the AA/8(a)BD that the relationship between the former employer
or principal and the disadvantaged individual or applicant concern does not give the
former employer actual control or the potential to control the applicant or Participant
and such relationship is in the best interests of the 8(a) BD firm; or
(3) Receive compensation from the applicant or Participant in any form as directors,
officers or employees, including dividends, that exceeds the compensation to be received
by the highest officer (usually CEO or President). The highest ranking officer may elect
to take a lower salary than a non-disadvantaged individual only upon demonstrating that it
helps the applicant or Participant. In the case of a Participant, the Participant must
also obtain the prior written consent of the AA/8(a)BD or designee before changing the
compensation paid to the highest ranking officer to be below that paid to a
non-disadvantaged individual.
(f) Non-disadvantaged individuals who transfer majority stock ownership or control of the
firm to an immediate family member within two years prior to the application and remain
involved in the firm as a stockholder, officer, director, or key employee of the firm are
presumed to control the firm. The presumption may be rebutted by showing that the
transferee has independent management experience necessary to control the operation of the
firm.
(g) Non-disadvantaged
individuals or entities may be found to control or have the power to control in any of the
following circumstances, which are illustrative only and not all inclusive:
(1) In circumstances where an applicant or Participant seeks to establish disadvantaged
control of the Board of Directors through paragraph (d)(2) of this section,
non-disadvantaged individuals control the Board of Directors of the applicant or
Participant, either directly through majority voting membership, or indirectly, where the
by-laws allow non-disadvantaged individuals effectively to prevent a quorum or block
actions proposed by the disadvantaged individuals.
(2) A non-disadvantaged
individual or entity, having an equity interest in the applicant or participant, provides
critical financial or bonding support or a critical license to the applicant or
Participant which directly or indirectly allows the non-disadvantaged individual
significantly to influence business decisions of the Participant.
(3) A non-disadvantaged individual or entity controls the applicant or Participant or an
individual disadvantaged owner through loan arrangements. Providing a loan guaranty on
commercially reasonable terms does not, by itself, give a non-disadvantaged individual or
entity the power to control a firm.
(4) Business relationships
exist with non-disadvantaged individuals or entities which cause such dependence that the
applicant or Participant cannot exercise independent business judgment without great
economic risk.
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