The Small Business Administration (SBA) announced it will relocate six of its regional offices out of often-called “sanctuary cities,” arguing that the existing locations are bad for small business communities and not complying with federal immigration law.
The SBA is critically important to small businesses, especially those damaged in the hurricanes that hit Georgia last year.
The Small Business Administration said it will relocate six of its regional offices in so-called “sanctuary cities.”
The Small Business Administration announced this week that it will be moving offices out of sanctuary cities and cracking down on any benefits going to illegal immigrants.
The U.S. Small Business Administration is moving its regional offices out of New York City as new immigrant deportation policies take shape.
The Small Business Association plans to close its Chicago office and those in five other sanctuary cities. Administrator Kelly Loeffler, who was born in Bloomington and attended the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign,
According to the SBA, the relocations will occur in cities that they said “do not comply with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement.” The locations include Atlanta, Boston,