January 16, 2025

SBA: More Than $26 Million Granted to Create 13 New Women’s Business Centers Nationally

Funding Establishes First WBC in the U.S. Virgin Islands, Adds Support for 17 Existing WBCs and Specific Grants for Childcare Enterprises and Government Contracting

Today, Administrator Isabel Casillas Guzman, head of the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) and the voice in President Biden’s Cabinet for America’s more than 34 million small businesses, awarded $26.25 million to create 13 new Women’s Business Centers (WBC) and support 17 existing WBCs across America, expanding SBA’s network of WBCs to 168 and the total grants to 185, the largest numbers in program history. This investment also is the first time the SBA awarded grants to provide specialized services for childcare enterprises, support government contracting efforts for women-owned small businesses, and develop national virtual trainings for women across the country.

“In the last four years, women have powered a generational Small Business Boom, filing new business applications at double the rate, and the Biden-Harris Administration is expanding the network of Women’s Business Centers to record highs to serve them,” said SBA Administrator Guzman. “I am proud of the SBA’s larger footprint, virtual capacity, and our leveraging of this new scale to specialize in areas of critical importance to our economy, including childcare businesses and women in government contracting. When we invest in women, our economy wins.”

In addition to this funding, the SBA also announced a collection of resources to support entrepreneurs that want to start, sustain, or expand their childcare business development. Later this year, the SBA will launch a new MySBA Learning journey dedicated to childcare businesses to complement the expanded in-person services delivered through the WBC network.

Today, the SBA awarded 35 WBC grants to 30 existing and new organizations in three categories. These included 16 awards to support entrepreneurs with starting and expanding childcare businesses, 13 awards focused on government contracting to assist entrepreneurs with obtaining government contracts and related certifications, and six core service awards to provide general entrepreneurial development services, including expanded and/or virtual services to reach rural and underserved communities.

Among the grantees, there are:

The SBA’s Office of Women’s Business Ownership oversees the WBCs and since early 2021, more than 50 have been added to the network to help women entrepreneurs start and grow small businesses and compete in a marketplace where they still face obstacles. The WBCs offer one-on-one counseling, training, networking, workshops, technical assistance, and mentoring on numerous business development topics, including business startups, financial management, marketing, and procurement.

Women’s Business Center Grant Recipients

State/TerritoryGranteeGrant FocusCurrent or New
AlabamaCatalyst Center*Government contractingCurrent
ArizonaSouthwest Human Development CouncilYWCA Southern ArizonaChildcareChildcareNewCurrent
CaliforniaInternational Rescue Committee (Oakland)ChildcareNew
ConnecticutWomen’s Business Development Council*Childcare, core, government contractingCurrent 
FloridaBroward County Black Chamber of Commerce FoundationGovernment contractingNew
GeorgiaGeorgia Microenterprise NetworkAtlanta Black Chambers FoundationGovernment contractingGovernment contractingNewNew
IllinoisWomen’s Business Development CenterGovernment contractingCurrent
IowaIowa Center for Economic SuccessCoreCurrent
MaineCoastal EnterprisesChildcareCurrent
MassachusettsCenter for Women & EnterpriseGovernment contracting(two grants)Current
MichiganCamp Fire West Michigan (Vibrant Futures)Lean Rocket LabChildcareGovernment contractingNewNew
MontanaZero to Five FoundationChildcareNew
NebraskaCenter for Rural AffairsChildcare, coreCurrent
New HampshireCooperatives for a Better World (Start.COOP)*CoreNew
New MexicoWomen’s Economic Self-Sufficiency TeamChildcareCurrent
New YorkBusiness Outreach Center NetworkChildcare, government contractingCurrent
North DakotaWomen and TechnologyChildcareCurrent
OhioEconomic & Community Development InstituteGovernment contractingCurrent
OklahomaRural Enterprises of OklahomaGovernment contractingCurrent
TexasBetter Business Bureau (Austin)CoreNew
U.S. Virgin IslandsCommunity Foundation of the Virgin IslandsCoreNew
UtahSalt Lake Area Chamber of CommerceChildcareCurrent
VirginiaGeorge Mason University Instructional FoundationEO CompaniesChildcareChildcareCurrentNew
WashingtonSeattle Economic Development Fund DBA Business Impact NorthwestGovernment contractingCurrent
Washington, D.C.National Association of Family Child Care*ChildcareNew
WisconsinWisconsin Women’s Business Initiative CorporationChildcareCurrent
This post was originally published here.