Let’s Mean Business on Vets Aid
Earlier this month, the Senate passed legislation I wrote with Olympia Snowe (R-Maine) that will not only help reservists keep their businesses afloat while they’re deployed, but also expand business opportunities for them in the future. Specifically, our bill creates national transition teams that would provide managerial, financial, planning and technical resources through a network of existing centers such as the UMass-Boston Small Business Development Center, the Northeast Veterans Business Resource Center and the Center for Women and Enterprise.
We establish a governmental task force with representatives from the Small Business Administration, the Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the Department of Labor and the General Services Administration to focus on coordinating all federal resources available for veterans and reservists.
And we also expand access to capital. We improve the Military Reservist Economic Injury Disaster Loans — a program I created back in 1999, but which the administration has failed to promote to reservists. Our bill gives reservists more time to apply, increases the size of the loans they can receive, allows soldiers to have loans approved before they deploy and demands that agencies develop an aggressive outreach plan.
Merely offering these small business benefits does no good if vets aren’t aware of them — and based on a January hearing, they aren’t.
Mark Aldrich, an Iraq veteran who owns a small business in Byfield, grew so frustrated by the lack of information he and his fellow reservists received before he deployed that he started the Veterans Business Group to serve as a clearinghouse of helpful information.
Aldrich’s initiative and Krasner’s departure from Massachusetts should be a wake-up call for the White House to work with Congress to finally address the glaring needs of our veterans and reservists.
Supporting our troops means more than just providing them with the equipment they need while in harm’s way. It also means giving them the tools they need to succeed in business once they come home.

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As always John Kerry is right on the job,trying to help veterans.
The big difference is that John Kerry cares about veterans and wants to help and George Bush and his administration just pretends to care.
John Stone I agree with you 100%. John Kerry has and always will be there to help our vets.