SBA offers disaster relief loans in Montana for Crow Tribe and local entities
Severe weather in Montana is prompting fresh federal support for tribal communities, businesses and residents facing recovery costs. The assistance extends to the Crow Tribe as well as private nonprofits and other eligible applicants seeking financing to cover disaster-related expenses.
Highlights
- The U.S. Small Business Administration is offering disaster relief loans to the Crow Tribe and other Montana entities affected by severe weather.
- Eligible businesses, nonprofits, and residents may apply for SBA loans to cover recovery needs and support operational continuity following recent weather disruptions.
- Access to federal SBA financing aims to ease financial pressures, enable rebuilding, and stabilize economic activity in impacted Montana communities.
Federal relief program for storm recovery
As reported by the U.S. Small Business Administration, the agency is making financial relief available to the Crow Tribe in Montana and to other affected groups following severe weather conditions. Eligible businesses, private nonprofit organizations and residents may apply for loans intended to help cover a range of recovery needs and support continuity of operations.The program forms part of the SBA's broader disaster-response effort, which provides financing after natural disasters disrupt households, community organizations and commercial activity. The agency says additional details on eligibility and the application process are available through its official website.
Support implications for Montana communities
The relief is aimed at easing financial pressure in an area where severe weather can interrupt business activity, damage property and strain local services. Access to SBA disaster loans can help affected entities manage rebuilding costs while maintaining essential functions during recovery.For the Crow Tribe and surrounding Montana communities, the availability of federal financing may provide an important bridge as residents and organizations assess losses and plan next steps. The measure also supports the wider goal of stabilizing local economic activity after weather-related disruption.
Our earlier coverage of SBA disaster assistance for the Crow Tribe of Montana detailed how the agency’s declaration opened access to both physical damage loans and Economic Injury Disaster Loans (EIDL), while adjacent counties were generally limited to EIDL support. We also outlined key borrowing limits and terms, including up to $2 million for businesses, specific caps for homeowners and renters, and the option to use EIDL funds for working-capital needs even without direct physical damage.
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