National Post (National Edition)

Entertainm­ent industry a ‘key economic driver’

- The Canadian Press

TORONTO IN 2016

Los Angeles-based production­s, adding that Toronto will have to fight to keep the business.

The mayor said he met with the studios to thank them for their business and to find out what would help them return to Toronto.

“They told me that we had to continue to invest in facilities,” he said.

Vancouver has a full-time person promoting the city in Los Angeles, Tory said, adding that Toronto’s other competitio­n includes Atlanta, New York and London.

“We have every reason to be proud and aggressive,” he said. “We are competitiv­e with them in every respect in the film and television and digital production industry, but we’ve got to go down and make sure we sell our story and not be complacent or shy as Canadians often are.”

And he said tax credits are an “important part of the package” that keeps production­s coming to the city.

“Atlanta, New York, California itself, they have them, and so it’s really just us being competitiv­e,” Tory said.

In an effort to bring more work to Toronto, Tory said the city is moving to streamline processes for production companies and work with residents in neighbourh­oods impacted by filming.

“As our film industry keeps growing every year we are going to create more jobs and more economic success,” he said, noting that the academy awardwinni­ng film Suicide Squad employed more than 4,700 people while it was being filmed in Toronto in 2015.

He also said that the TV series Suits, now in its seventh season, provides the equivalent of 2,300 full-time jobs.

“These are good jobs, they’re skilled jobs, they’re solid jobs, for set designers, editors, directors, hair stylists, makeup specialist­s, special effects, catering, sound, lighting, actors,” Tory said.

Combining the $2.01 billion with figures from broadcaste­rs and interactiv­e digital media — such as video games — resulted in a total investment figure of $3.26 billion for all of Toronto’s film, television and digital media production last year, the city said in a release.

Foreign and domestic TV series remained the dominant investment type in Toronto, as 115 production­s brought in $908 million in 2016, the city said.

Foreign major production investment in film and television grew to $794 million, a 49-per-cent increase from 2015, while investment in animation and visual effects grew to $403 million, a 179-per-cent increase from the previous year, city figures showed.

Investment by broadcaste­rs was down about $69 million in 2016 at $211 million, while interactiv­e digital media rose to $1.05 billion, from $1 billion a year earlier.

Commercial­s production spending was up 10 per cent last year to $380 million.

“This is a key economic driver for Toronto, and it enhances our reputation as a home to creative industries,” Tory said.

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