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Resource ID: #
Subject: 
Source: U.S. Small Business Administration
Affiliation: 
Date: 1987-07-01

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Description

NICAR receives this data as an Access database from the SBA through a FOIA request; we do not reformat or clean the data in any way. For the Access file we change the names of the tables to make them easier to use; for the CSV format we simply export the tables as comma-delimited files with double quote text qualifiers.

NOTE: Only the CSV files are currently available for download. If you prefer the Access file, please email datalib@ire.org. We hope to make this file available for direct download soon.

Disaster loans from the Small Business Administration are the primary form of federal assistance for non-farm, private-sector disaster losses. For this reason, the disaster loans program is the only form of SBA assistance not limited to small businesses. Disaster loans from SBA help homeowners, renters, businesses of all sizes and nonprofit organizations finance their rebuilding. The data identifies the borrower, the disaster, the amount and, for business borrowers, whether the loan was paid in full or deemed uncollectible.

Here's a sample of the individual loan records (Disaster) and the corresponding table of declared disasters (Dislook):

Record layouts and samples of this database

Sample Data (CSV) (Disaster_sample.csv) 12.4 KB
Main documentation (sba_disaster_readme.txt) 14 KB
Record Layout (xls) (layouts.xls) 34.5 KB

Related Tipsheets

  • The Day After: Resources for Covering the Aftermath of Natural Disasters
    This tipsheet is comprised of slides from Nixon's power point presentation on covering natural disasters. The slides cover information about SBA disaster loans, federal contracts and other data. Nixon included examples of recent stories that used each type of data.
  • Following the Money after a Disaster
    Buettner walks us through how story about the federal money given to New York after 9/11. He discusses the agencies he investigated and the sorts of data he analyzed to find out where the money was going. The data he discusses includes contract data, grant data, SBA Disaster Loans, and FEMA grants. Buettner discusses how he found and used each type of data. At the end of the tipsheet, he shares the results of his investigation.
  • Hurricane/Disaster CAR
    The four hurricanes that battered Florida in 2004 made for one of the most remarkable, memorable, and costly hurricane seasons in history. John Maines has suggestions and resources for reporters covering emergency situations, from the Federal Emergency Managment Agency, to private companies who provide images of destruction for free.
  • After the storm: Using FEMA records to piece together winners & losers
    Gaul's tipsheet outlines approaches to analyzing Federal Emergency Management Administration records to show "how the breathless coverage of storms greases the skids for disaster declarations." Tips include tracking how, where and to whom FEMA dollars are allocated following a disaster, whether National Flood Insurance Program premiums are covering expenses, and who are receiving Small Business Administration loans following a disaster.

Related Stories

  • Neediest slighted on storm loans
    When tornadoes struck Fort Worth and destroyed many properties, President Clinton issued a disaster declaration. Fort Worth Star Telegram reporters find out who got the promised federal assistance and how much they received.
  • Cashing in on Disaster
    This investigation started with the observation that many more Floridians were receiving disaster relief funds than were actually affected by the 2004 storms. The story went on to reveal that some relatively unaffected parts of Florida received even more aid than areas that took a direct hit. Residents of Miami-Dade County got more than $21 million, though the actual damage done there was equivalent to a bad thunderstorm. Reporters found that FEMA inspectors often received inadequate training. Results from the story include a state legislative investigation into the hurricane payments and even involvement from the federal Department of Homeland Security.
  • 9/11 Money Trough
    The series examined what happened to the $21.4 billion that President Bush promised to help New York City recover in the aftermath of Sept. 11. The results are disheartening, finding widespread waste, fraud and mismanagement.
  • Sept 11 - Lax loans
    The governments $5 billion effort to help small businesses recover from the Sept 11 attacks was so loosely managed that it gave low-interest loans to companies that didn't need terrorism relief - or even know they were getting it.
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