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If You Plan to Use the SBA’s Template Joint Venture Agreement, Read This First

Posted on April 5, 2021 by Steven Koprince Print Article

If you’re setting up your first joint venture under the SBA’s rules, you may be tempted to download the SBA’s template joint venture agreement and use it as-is.

But, as of the date of this post, the SBA’s template joint venture agreement is outdated–and it also has some other quirks and potential problems you should know about. If you’re planning to use the SBA’s joint venture template, read this first.

Outdated Provisions

If you’ve been following my posts on SmallGovCon (and I hope you have!), you’ll recall that I have recently written about substantive changes the SBA made to the joint venture regulations in November 2020. For mentor-protégé joint ventures attempting to comply with the regulations under 13 C.F.R. 125.8, I believe that two of these changes–to the mandatory JV requirements governing bank accounts and recordkeeping, respectively–are substantive changes sufficiently at odds with the “old,” pre-November regulations such that a joint venture agreement will be non-compliant unless it includes these updates. As of the date of this post, these changes are not included in the SBA’s template.

The November 2020 regulations also made some other changes, not only to the small business joint venture regulations under 13 C.F.R. 125.8, but the separate joint venture regulations for the for 8(a), SDVOSB/VOSB, HUBZone and EDWOSB/WOSB programs. For instance, the SBA’s new regulations eliminate the term “Project Manager” in favor of the more-inclusive “Responsible Manager.” These other changes may not be significant enough to render a joint venture non-compliant if it doesn’t enact them–but why take any risks?

Included, but Non-Required, Provisions

Beyond the potential problems posed by the November 2020 rules, the SBA’s joint venture template doesn’t specify when a particular item is required by the regulation and when it is not. And the template is chock-full of provisions that sound like they’re probably required by law, but actually aren’t. Here are a few that caught my eye:

Other Potentially Confusing/Problematic Provisions

I have also noticed a few provisions in the template joint venture agreement that may confuse venturers:

A Few Final Thoughts

I think it’s great that the SBA has provided the public with a starting point for a joint venture agreement. But I am concerned that the now-outdated template may lull small businesses into a false sense of security.

No matter what your starting point–even an SBA template–there is absolutely no substitute for carefully crosswalking your joint venture agreement against the appropriate, current, SBA regulation. That’s the only 100% sure way to know that you’re in compliance–and avoid adopting terms that might appear mandatory, but are anything but.

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