(COLORADO) — Congress Representative Jeff Crank invited the Small Business Administration (SBA) to move its offices to Colorado Springs.
In a letter addressed to Administrator Kelly Loeffler on Tuesday, Feb. 25, Crank applauded her decision to move SBA offices out of sanctuary cities and thanked her for standing up for ‘common-sense policies.’
“Sanctuary state and city policies have consequences, and moving the SBA out of Denver is a prime example,” Crank stated via X (formerly known as Twitter). Crank alleges that these cities, such as Denver, are more interested in “appeasing far-left radicals than protecting their constituents and refure to cooperate with reasonable federal immigration policies.”
The letter extended an ‘open invitation’ for Loeffler to move the offices to Colorado Springs, and stated various reasons including location and convenience as to why Olympic City should be considered.
Crank said Colorado Springs was home to some of the most “cutting-edge small businesses in the nation,” and mentioned that the City houses nearly 80,000 small businesses that employ over 120,000 workers. Crank also said that moving the District Office to Colorado Springs would allow federal offices to hire military spouses to address the 20% unemployment rate they face.
The short move to Colorado Springs would also allow the SBA to comply with President Trump’s orders and Loeffler’s Day One Memo, according to Crank.
“It is important that SBA offices are located not in major cities — dominated by large corporations and run-away governments — but in locations where safety is prioritized and innovation propels the local economy,” said Crank.

