Consumer & Business Response

Disasters are unpredictable and can be devastating to a community. But there is a lot your bank can do to help prepare your customers for these events.

Help Consumers Prepare for a Natural Disaster

Disasters are unpredictable and can be devastating to a community. But there is a lot your bank can do to help prepare your customers for these events.

Share these tips:

  • Store important documents such as proof of identity, property ownership, insurance policies, bank and investment account information, and three years of tax returns in a bank safe-deposit box. Encase these items in plastic bags to prevent moisture.
  • Prepare additional copies of critical documents such as birth certificates, adoption papers, marriage licenses and the deed to your home for safekeeping and inform a trustee, relative or attorney of their location.
  • Print out key contact information for executors, trustees and guardians and store it in a secure location, either in your safe-deposit box or with a close relative.
  • Inventory personal and household valuables (take photos and keep receipts) to help evaluate replacement costs.
  • Include surplus cash, preferably small bills, in your home emergency kit. The kit should also include a three-day supply of food and water, a first aid kit, can opener, radio, flashlights and batteries.
  • Create digital copies, which can serve as a supplement or backup to paper documents.  Scanned or electronic documents can be uploaded with secure online backup services.
  • Contact your insurance agent or visit the Federal Emergency Management Agency’s website to determine if a flood insurance policy is right for you.

Bill would expand farm partnership access to PPP

March 01, 2021

ICBA-supported legislation allowing farmers and ranchers categorized as partnerships to use gross income to calculate maximum Paycheck Protection Program loan amounts was introduced in the House.

Background: Farmers and ranchers without payroll or positive net income in 2019 were shut out of the original Paycheck Protection Program. Congress changed this limitation to be based on gross income, but SBA guidance has required farm partnership applicants to use net income from their schedule K-1.

Pending: A pending revision to the SBA's loan calculation formula for sole proprietors, independent contractors, and self-employed individuals will reportedly use gross income instead of net income. A bipartisan group of lawmakers last week told SBA it has the authority to use gross income for farm partnerships.

What's New: A bipartisan bill from Rep. Jim Hagedorn (R-Minn.) and others would allow the use of gross income and retroactively enable producers who used net income to recalculate their PPP loans if they have not been forgiven.

ICBA Position: ICBA has long advocated using gross income in lieu of net income to show positive income and allow these entities to qualify for the PPP.