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Saturday, August 3, 2013

SBA signed symbolic connection with the native American Contractors Association

The U.S. small business administration and the native American Contractors Association (NACA) have to extend a strategic alliance memorandum our reach to Indian entrepreneurs and boost business opportunities signed.

To continue working, SBA affect to our native American small business owners. This Alliance strengthens both our organizations goals: creation, development and expansion of small businesses in the American Indian Alaska Native and native Hawaiian communities support.

NACA promotes the common interests of the tribal influences in the ownership of companies, native Hawaiian organizations (NHO) and Alaska Native companies (ANC), and also promotes the advantages of using native state-owned enterprises with high-quality products and services in the federal marketplace and supports the SBA 8 letter a business development program. In addition, NACA monitored business Federal economic and development policies and their uses member driven perspective for pension contributions to enter.

By combining our resources with NACA, we can stimulate new business growth and innovation for the nearly 240,000 Indians to small businesses.  I would like to NACA for their commitment to this effort to thank, how we work, to extend to the strengthening and development of small businesses in the Indian economy.

In my last blog, I have that SBA our focus continues our training and training for companies owned by increasing of the Indians, and we do just that.

The SBA Office of native American Affairs which is town of BARROW, Alaska, one of the northernmost communities in the United States visited in June. We had shared the good ideas for the improvement and development of tribal businesses the chance to talk with the leaders of the Alaska Native village Corporation, in Northern Alaska.

And in may former Deputy Administrator Marie Johns, region 8 Administrator Matt Varilek and I visited Sisseton-Wahpeton Oyate Lake traverse reservation in South Dakota, North East. We talked with tribal leadership and tribal divisions including economic development and planning through the innovation entrepreneurship.

In may, I had arranged permission to participate in a small business Roundtable, of the Navajo nation in New Mexico. We met with small business owners to talk about the regulatory fairness, customer, and business development.

The signing of the Alliance, as well as our tribe visits SBA include proactive outreach to native rural communities in an effort to business growth and tribal businesses by providing the necessary tools and resources.

As a result, add SBA of entrepreneurial thinking and acting, and workshops to develop of the Lake traverse reservation and the Navajo nation.

Tags: official SBA news and views, open to trade, SBA news and views

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