Gavin Newsoms tax scheme could kill Hollywood jobs, lawmakers warn

California Gov.Gavin Newsom pushed in his final state budget a cap on business tax breaks in an effort to save money — but the film industry and some lawmakers are calling it a colossal screwup that would inadvertently kill jobs in the state’s struggling film industry.Around three dozen California lawmakers sent a letter last Friday to the governor asking him to fix the mistake.

They asked for an exemption for the state’s film and television tax credit program that Newsom has touted many times as helping to boost Hollywood.California “will be significantly kneecapped,” according to the letter.“It creates significant uncertainty for production companies, in terms of when, how and even, if, they will be able to monetize earned tax credits.”In the state budget process this year, Newsom had proposed — alongside a controversial software tax — a permanent cap on business tax breaks at $5 million or 50% of total tax liability, whichever is higher.

The final version extends the existing cap for three more years and beginning in 2030, the cap would be at $5 million or 70% of tax liability.Lawmakers had mistakenly thought the cap would not apply to the film and TV tax credit program.“We need to have people understand that these changes, which I think people believed were minor, are really significant and will result in significant job loss if we don’t fix them,” Assemblymember Rick Zbur of Los Angeles told the Los Angeles Times.Film industry groups have been warning that the cap would violate California lawmakers’ promise to help the business through the film and TV tax credit program, which Newsom announced just this week will deliver a record $6.6 billion in economic impact.“The uncertainty created by this turn-around will, in effect, say to production companies that credits earned under the programme may not be honoured as originally promised,” the Motion Picture Association and the Entertainment Union Coalition wrote in a separate letter ...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles