Sandoval County sets aside $1 Million to extend business continuity program

Sandoval County, NM – TheSandovalCountyBoard of Commissioners unanimously approved $1 million of American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA) funding at the June 17th Commission meeting to extend the county’s business continuity grant program. 

These ARPA funds will be used to address the negative economic impacts caused by the public health emergency, which includes harm to small businesses and non-profits. This will be a continuation of what the CARES Act funding did for qualifying county-wide businesses last year.

Grants will first be prioritized to those businesses that did not receive County CARES Act Funds due to unavailability of funds or for businesses with costs that exceeded the $20,000 limit set during the county’s last round of CARES Act Continuity Grants. The County will also work with its partner municipalities to fund those qualified applications they were not able to fully fund last year. The Sandoval County municipalities that participated in the last CARES Act Continuity Act program included: City of Rio Rancho, Town of Bernalillo, Village of Corrales and the Town of Cuba.

ARPA funds can only be used to reimburse the costs of business interruption caused by required closures or reduced size of operations provided those costs were not paid by insurance or by another federal, state, or local program.

Once open for new applications, the program will be able to qualify applications with requests that exceed the established $20,000 limit. These applications will be considered “Extraordinary Requests” and will require approval by the Board of County Commissioners.

To date, Sandoval County has received $14.3 million from the American Rescue Plan Act (ARPA), which allocated $2.456 billion to state and local governments in New Mexico. The first priority identified was small business recovery and relief. Allocation of the remaining ARPA funds remains under review and pending final Commission approval.

“Many of our small businesses are still feeling the sting of COVID-19 financially even though many residents have been vaccinated and things look like they are heading back to normal,” said Chairman Dave Heil. “Small business is the lifeblood of Sandoval County, it only makes sense that we would support them with funds we received to aid with the fallout of a global pandemic.”

Vice-Chairman, Michael Meek, said helping out small businesses and nonprofits is within itself the same as stabilizing the foundation of any structure.

“Anything done that helps ease the burden of our local businesses after the pandemic is the right thing to do,” he said. “These grants in turn will help give us the stability we need to succeed as a county.”

For more information on ARPA funding please contact Sandoval County Economic Director Dora Dominguez at ddominguez@sandovalcountynm.gov or call her at 505-867-8687