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Introducing Maine’s First Small Business Advocate Jay Martin

Introducing Maine’s First Small Business Advocate Jay Martin. Presentation in Threes Three functions of the Office of Small Business Advocacy Three examples of unreasonable regulatory enforcement, past, pending, and resolved Three requests of you. Maine’s State Seal

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Introducing Maine’s First Small Business Advocate Jay Martin

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  1. Introducing Maine’s First Small Business Advocate Jay Martin

  2. Presentation in Threes • Three functions of the Office of Small Business Advocacy • Three examples of unreasonable regulatory enforcement, past, pending, and resolved • Three requests of you

  3. Maine’s State Seal • Shield: moose, field, water, woods, and pine tree. Farmer with scythe, and sailor with anchor. • Motto: "Dirigo" ("I lead"), and North Star • Banner: Maine. Indicates Maine values: harmony between industry and natural resources

  4. Example #1 – Past • Southern Maine Environmental Remediation Consultant resolving pollution • SBA’s Small Business Owner of the Year; 15 employees • Appealed DEP ruling on full-time in-house chemist requirement • Won every legal battle, but lost the war - now out of business

  5. Why Secretary of State’s Office? • Secretary of State Charles E. Summers, Jr., former SBA Administrator (New England) • Constitutional Officer; independent of the Executive Branch; acts impartially • Appointment did not expand state payroll; filled a vacant press position • Dept. of Economic and Community Development • Small Business Administration

  6. Three Functions of Small Business Advocate • Direct Advocacy • Regulatory Fairness Board • Comments and testifies on proposed rules and legislation

  7. Direct Advocacy • Work with small business owners (50 employees or fewer) who register grievances regarding regulatory enforcement actions • Advocate is not an attorney so information is open to public scrutiny • Often assists business owners who cannot afford attorneys or regulatory compliance officers

  8. Determine assistance is appropriate • Business must face significant economic hardship as a result of a regulatory enforcement action • Fine or license suspension or revocation imposed by an agency enforcement action • Likely to result in the temporary or permanent closure of the small business or termination of employees of the small business • The grievance must be legitimate

  9. Research pertinent regulations with assistance from Augusta brain trust • Meet with regulatory agents and commissioners to gain perspectives • Work with the regulatory agents and small businesses to achieve equitable resolutions to legitimate grievances

  10. Regulatory Impact Notice • When necessary, Advocate prepares this notice for Secretary of State to consider sending to the Governor • Outlines fact finding • Recommends alternative effective enforcement relieving the small business of significant economic hardship imposed Request #1: Please contact us should you need our assistance; spread the word to your clients and colleagues

  11. Example #2 – Pending • Disk golf facility opens, receiving approval from code enforcement officer • Premier holes run along streamside, attracting players from out-of-state • DEP rules no grass trimming along streamside, making play impossible • Owner spends thousands and hundreds of hours to achieve compliance • Advocate researching issues; will attend permit meeting; preparing to advocate as appropriate

  12. Regulatory Fairness Board • Chaired by Secretary of State Charles E. Summers, Jr. • Staffed by Advocate • Four private sector members, appointed by Speaker of the House, President of the Senate, and Governor • Members: Patricia Kuhl, Brunswick; Doug Smith, Dover-Foxcroft; Mark Tyler, Oakland; Mike Cote, Whiting

  13. Regulatory Fairness Board (cont.) • Hears testimony and reports to the Legislature and the Governor on regulatory and statutory changes necessary to enhance the State's business climate. • Addresses common denominator regulatory obstacles affecting industries • Next hearing: February 24, 1 -3 pm • Request #2: Please help us identify these obstacles

  14. Pending Rules and Legislation • Advocate comments on proposed rules and testifies on legislation affecting small businesses • Request #3: Please share your ideas and concerns with us

  15. What if regulations and statutes were designed like interstate highway intersections?

  16. Streamlined • Sensible • Easy to comply

  17. ???

  18. Why Jay Martin? • Bangor native • Son of business owners • John Bapst graduate • University of Maine English degree (technical writing) • 16 year restaurant manager • Owner, Write It Right Consulting • Experienced facilitator • Customer service perspective

  19. Example #3 – Resolved! • A practicing pharmacist allowed his license to remain expired for three years • Employer a highly reputable Maine small business owner • Employer failed to note license expiration; faced nearly a half million dollars repayment of MaineCare prescriptions despite no harm found. • Repayment would have likely put him out of business

  20. Example #3 – Resolved! (cont.) • Advocate interviewed business owner; researched regulations • Advocated for repayment of dispensing fees only • Owner keeps his business; jobs saved; hiring new pharmacist • Achieved equitable resolution to legitimate regulatory enforcement grievance

  21. Conclusion • Maine’s regulatory fairness law is improving Maine’s business climate; fulfilling State Seal vision • Secretary of State offers experience, independence and impartiality

  22. Small Business Advocate helps! • An independent voice for Maine small businesses within state’s regulatory system • Ensures regulations function fairly and effectively • Comments on rules and testifies on legislation • Offers management experience, customer service background and communication skills

  23. Regulatory Fairness Board • Invites public testimony on regulatory and issues that impact Maine businesses • Elicits public comment on rules and regulations that unreasonably impede business • Recommends regulatory and statutory changes to enhance Maine’s business climate.

  24. Requests of You • Register regulatory enforcement grievances with our office – and tell your colleagues and clients about us • Watch out for “potholes” and help the RFB address them • Provide us your thoughts on proposed rules and pending legislation • When you think “Regulatory Fairness and Reform”, think Secretary of State Thank you!

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