SBA 7A can do it....

The SBA now has an SBA Franchise Directory listing all the names of eligible franchises throughout the United States. In order to be approved, a franchise must provide the SBA with a Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD), which describes the overall business history, financial health, and general marketing techniques that the franchise uses. After submitting this document, the SBA can decide whether to add it to their directory of approved businesses.

In general, franchisors that seek to retain significant management rights, operational control, or profits from their franchisees are not eligible. According to the SBA, the “franchisee must have the right to profit from efforts commensurate with ownership,” so, in essence, the SBA must believe that the franchise agreement is fair before a franchise makes it onto their directory.