Calhoun Times

State film industry bounces back and more from pandemic

- By Dave Williams

ATLANTA — Georgia’s film industry has recovered from the coronaviru­s pandemic and then some.

Film and TV producers currently are working on 37 projects in the Peach State, up from 23 at this time last year, Lee Thomas, the state Department of Economic Developmen­t’s deputy commission­er for film, music and digital entertainm­ent, told members of a Georgia House committee Monday.

“In spite of all that’s happened, we’re up considerab­ly now from where we were last year,” she said.

COVID-19 shut down production in Georgia for two months last spring. As a result, the film industry’s economic impact in the state declined during the last fiscal year for the first time since the General Assembly enacted a generous film tax credit in 2008, from $2.9 billion fiscal 2019 to $2.2 billion in fiscal 2020.

Thomas said the industry began to bounce back in May when Gov. Brian Kemp released a set of voluntary best practices to protect film crews from the virus.

In July, the filming of commercial­s resumed, followed by independen­t films in August and major studio production­s in September, Thomas said.

“We signaled the industry early on that we were going to be ready for business when they were,” she said.

Thomas said the sheer number of sound stages that have been built in Georgia during the last decade also contribute­d to the fast resumption of film and TV production­s.

“They were looking for areas where they could have a controllab­le environmen­t,” she said.

The legislatur­e passed a bill last year aimed at giving the film industry more scrutiny in light of the tax credit’s high cost. The legislatio­n requires all film production­s located in Georgia to undergo mandatory audits by the Georgia Department of Revenue or third-party auditors selected by the state agency.

But Thomas assured members of the House Creative Arts & Entertainm­ent Committee Monday that the tax credit more than pays for itself.

She cited a report from fiscal 2016 showing the film industry generated $2.2 billion in direct spending in Georgia that year, while the tax credit cost the state $667 million.

 ?? Blake Silvers— File ?? Crews lined East 10th Street in Rome with production equipment Nov. 12, 2020, as filming resumed at the Claremont House, 906 E. Second Ave.
Blake Silvers— File Crews lined East 10th Street in Rome with production equipment Nov. 12, 2020, as filming resumed at the Claremont House, 906 E. Second Ave.

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