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  • Provide resources for targeted marketing and sole-source training for contracting officers.
  • Raise the adjusted net worth threshold for EDWOSBs from $350,000 to $750,000.
  • Modernize new WOSB/EDWOSB application process and provide implementation time buffer.
  • Implement the Five-Year Runway Extension Act.
  • Further engage HBCUs conducting R&D in SBIR Programming and expand outreach with key agencies.
  • Identify resources needed for training at HBCUs and MSIs.
  • USPTO should continue developing new methods to improve participation by underrepresented populations.
  • As proposed in the Building Blocks of STEM Act: NSF Grants should be utilized for research regarding female student engagement in STEM and NSF Computer Science Education Grants should be utilized for development of gender-inclusive learning and teaching tools.
  • Avoid overcrowding of SBA resources.
  • Implement the NES-D.
  • Focus Area 1: Bridging Service Gaps in Underserved Communities – Improving Paid Family and Medical Leave (PFML) Options, Addressing Lack of Reliable Care Economy Services, and Connecting to High-speed, Affordable Broadband
    • Recommendation 1: Champion state PFML efforts and a bipartisan national solution.
    • Recommendation 2: Ensure accessible, reliable, and affordable child- and long-term-care services for women entrepreneurs in rural and underserved communities.
    • Recommendation 3: Bridge the women-owned small business digital divide by improving broadband access, speed, and affordability for more underserved women entrepreneurs.
  • Focus Area 2: Positioning More Women-Owned Small Businesses to Compete – Improving Underserved Women Entrepreneurs’ Financial Acumen, Access to Back Office Support, and a Skilled Workforce
    • Recommendation 1: Connect women entrepreneurs to accessible wrap-around services, back-office resources, and affordable professional support.
    • Recommendation 2: Provide dedicated support for women-owned small businesses and ecosystem builders offering onsite assistance to diverse women entrepreneurs.
  • Focus Area 3: Strengthening Federal Coordination Efforts at the Ground Level – Connecting Tailored Federal Resources to Local Governance Entities and Trusted Community Partners
    • Recommendation 1: Reestablish and authorize the Interagency Committee on Women’s Business Enterprise.
    • Recommendation 2: Enhance coordination of local, state, and federal entrepreneurial development and funding resources.
  • Focus Area 1: The Future is Female – Women Entrepreneurs & High Growth Industries
    • Recommendation 1: Ensure equitable advancement through women’s STEM entrepreneurial education, investment, and outreach.
    • Recommendation 2: Foster equitable opportunity for women entrepreneurs to lead 21st century industries by leveraging ongoing community development investments.
  • Focus Area 2: (Best) Practice(s) Make Perfect – Apprenticeships, Grants, and the STEM Pipeline
    • Recommendation 1: Bolster workforce (re)entry and development efforts to get and keep more women in the STEM entrepreneurial pipeline.
    • Recommendation 2: Improve the incubator and accelerator system to help women advance more successfully through the STEM entrepreneurial pipeline.
  • Focus Area 3: A Bright Idea – Promoting and Protecting Women’s STEM Innovation.
    • Recommendation 1: Maintain a viable pathway to commercialization for women innovators
    • Recommendation 2: Connect women innovators with the resources and information needed to claim ownership of and develop upon their innovations.
  • Focus Area 1: Dollars That Go the Distance – Equitable Access to Diverse Sources of Business Financing
    • Recommendation 1: Expand capital pathways for more BIPOC women business owners and increase support for community-based incubators, accelerators and resource partners.
    • Recommendation 2: Protect women entrepreneurs from predatory lenders and raise awareness about unfair financing terms.
  • Focus Area 2: When One Door Opens – Increasing Federal Contracting Opportunities and Awards for WOSBs
    • Recommendation 1: Adequately resource and empower SBA’s WOSB Certification Program and OSDBU offices across the federal government to meet and exceed WOSB program goals.
    • Recommendation 2: Identify and highlight winning agencies, successful OSDBUs, and best practices.
  • Adopt training for WOSBs on the procurement program.
  • Expand reporting requirements to include five, rather than three, years of revenue for the purpose of assessing small business program eligibility.
  • Increase technical support regarding access to start-up capital for veteran entrepreneurs.
  • Conduct research on the unique challenges and opportunities faced by women entrepreneurs in rural areas.
  • The SBA should continue considering information presented by the AWBC that encourages reevaluation of additional requirements WBC leaders find burdensome.
  • NWBC will continue monitoring implementation of the Women-Owned Small Business (WOSB) Federal Contracting Program.
  • Future federal support for pandemic recovery must include the childcare industry.
  • NWBC reiterates that SBA should consult with the AWBC when developing a funding opportunity for a new WBC grant.
  • Congress should develop and provide a uniform definition for a microbusiness. Additionally, Congress and SBA should consider further expansion of debt relief options for certain 7(a), 504, and microloan borrowers, and continue prioritizing the needs of economically disadvantaged micro- and small business borrowers in industries with significant participation by women, particularly those severely impacted by pandemic-related global supply chain issues or other major global economic disruptions.
  • The Biden-Harris Administration’s implementation of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (BIL) should continue to emphasize and prioritize women and women of color to ensure fair access to actual contracting awards through focused outreach, education, and data collection.
  • NWBC should commission research focusing on both high yield (STEM) and high growth industries (currently AEC), as well as industries with an overrepresentation of women but with undervaluation (healthcare).
  • Congress should ensure women entrepreneurs and workers re-entering the labor force or starting a business have fair access to training and targeted assistance opportunities (STEM RESTART Act). This training and assistance could occur as part of a collaboration between academia, entrepreneurial ecosystem builders, and small businesses.
  • The White House should develop a plan of action which would further empower SBA to improve and expand entrepreneurial development resources and affordable financing for the hardest hit childcare and care economy businesses, particularly in rural, rural/tribal, and other underserved communities.
  • NWBC should conduct a landscape analysis in fiscal year 2023 to better assess the effectiveness of current entrepreneurial ecosystems, technical assistance capacity, local governance issues, and the “brain drain” impacting rural WOSB/EDWOSB growth. The study should also identify effective program models to improve engagement of women entrepreneurs in tribal and immigrant communities.
  • SBA should continue monitoring Community Navigators Hub and Spoke organizations to ensure active outreach to, and engagement of, women entrepreneurs and institute robust benchmarks and metrics for these efforts.