TS Services – Pro Exterior Cleaning of Claremore, Oklahoma, receives the Certified Indian Business Community Leadership Award during the Cherokee Nation TERO Certified Indian Owned Business Awards Banquet in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on November 7, 2024. Photo: Anadisgoi / Cherokee Nation
When I think of our Cherokee Nation’s future, I often speak about unleashing the potential of Cherokee families.
My administration’s work and the incredible strides of my predecessors all focused on a foundation for future prosperity. This foundation is built on access to health care, food security, educational attainment and cultural preservation, just to name a few of the Nation’s longtime priorities.
All these efforts point toward a future when strong, growing Cherokee families have every opportunity to choose their path forward or blaze their own trail. That’s the future our ancestors dreamed of and one that we glimpse more and more of each day.
We recently announced a historic agreement between Cherokee Nation and the U.S. Department of the Treasury, which has awarded $86 million in federal funding dedicated to lending for Cherokee-owned small businesses. This program enhances access to financial capital for entrepreneurs and encourages private investments in small businesses by offering loans up to $5 million, in participation with banks.
It is difficult to overstate this opportunity and the transformative effect it will have for Cherokee families and their communities. This program quadruples our small-business lending capital and is estimated to fuel a more than $200 million economic impact across the nation over the next seven years. The crux of the program is up to a 1-to-1 participation loan with existing financial institutions, which ensures applicants meet standard loan requirements and oversight while also incentivizing approval.
Cherokee communities across our 14-county reservation and beyond rely on Cherokee-owned businesses to fuel local economies, stimulate community development, spur innovation, and create jobs rooted in our communities. These businesses are the lifeblood of our communities.
More than a third, 38%, of startups fail simply from running out of cash or not securing enough money to begin with, according to a CBInsights study. This program shields businesses from that outcome, reducing investment risk for Cherokee-owned businesses and their financial partners.
In September, Cherokee Nation received the first $26 million of the $86 million fund as part of a 90-day ramp up period. We just approved our first loan through the program to an at-large citizen and plan to open lending more broadly in March and to all Cherokee Nation citizens across the nation by next summer.
In addition to the $86 million lending program, Cherokee Nation also received $3 million to provide technical assistance to businesses in the program. This technical assistance grant removes even more barriers to aspiring business owners.
Cherokee Nation Commerce Services and the Small Business Assistance Center are available to help Cherokee-owned small businesses navigate the program and assemble the right financial package to start up or expand.
Cherokee entrepreneurs should start drafting plans to turn their business dreams into reality. There has never been a better time to unleash the potential of Cherokee families.
is the 18th elected Principal Chief of the Cherokee Nation, the largest Indian
tribe in the United States. He is only the second elected Principal Chief of the
Cherokee Nation from Vinita, the first being Thomas Buffington, who served from
1899-1903. Prior to being elected Principal Chief, Hoskin served as the tribe’s
Secretary of State. He also formerly served as a member of the Council of the
Cherokee Nation, representing District 11 for six years.