FREEHOLD – Small businesses in Monmouth County can apply until Monday up to $10,000 in subsidies to offset their expenses after months of closures caused by the coronavirus pandemic.
Business owners can file online programs at www.monmouthcountycares.com birth at 8 a.m. on Mondays. Meanwhile, business owners travel to the website and gather the required documents, said Tom Arnone, Director of Freeholder of Monmouth County.
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The subsidy requires corporations to:
Arnone said the tiplay station was established so that funding, which comes from the federal relief of the CARES Act that the county earned beyond this year, passes to the small businesses that are an essential component of Monmouth County’s economy.
Banks, governments, educational service providers, and health care providers do not appear to be eligible for subsidies. Adult entertainment companies, vape outlets and leaders are also not eligible.
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Small businesses may be able to apply for Monmouth County grants in which they earned a position that earned some other COVID-1 grant, but they cannot use the subsidy to pay the costs they revel in a position reimbursed through federal funds, Arnone said.
For example, a combined apple that has earned a federal loan from the verification of payment policy program to relocate staff may also apply for the Monmouth County grant to pay for other things, such as plexiglass screens, hand sanitizers, or other upgrade costs.
As Monmouth County launched its small business subsidy program, the New Jersey Economic Development Authority announced a new program to support small businesses in the state’s online presence.
Family retailers, restaurants, and non-public care corporations may be eligible for their e-commerce operations through an NJEDA program announced Wednesday.
The firm is spending $100,000 on a pilot assignment that would link businesses to 3 virtual marketing companies: Hudson Integrated, founded in Morristown; Positive Solutions, founded in Robbinsville; and Suasion Communications Group, with offices at Somers Point and Haddonfield.
The form of registration was discovered in www.surveymonkey.com/r/njedaecommerce.
Susanne Cervenka covers the Monmouth County government and property tax issues, winning several state and regional awards for her work. She covered the government for five years, with a gas station in Ohio and Florida before arriving in New Jersey in 2013. Contact her at @scervenka; 732-643-4229; [email protected].