East Bay Times

California production­s to spend at least $90 million on COVID-19 safety measures

- By Anousha Sakoui

The COVID-19 pandemic halted production­s and imposed costly new safety measures on film and television projects.

A new report has put a price tag on the costs, at least for production­s that received state tax credits.

About 50 projects in the California tax incentive program are expected to spend more than $90 million on COVID-19-related costs, according to data released from the California Film Commission on Tuesday. Those production­s have a total budget of $1.9 billion.

The details were released as part of a broader progress report from the commission on its tax credit program.

While the findings represent just a faction of the overall film and TV industry in the state, they highlight the pandemic’s financial toll on Hollywood.

The report is based on budgets that producers submitted to the state for review, including COVID-related expenses which qualify for state tax credits.

“Most countries and states are including COVID expenditur­es in their tax programs,” said Joe Chianase, senior vice president at Entertainm­ent Partners, which advises producers on film tax incentives. “It has just become the cost of doing business.”

Feature films with budgets of more than $20 million in the tax credit program are expected to spend 5% to 6.5% of their total budgets on COVIDrelat­ed costs, the report said.

Lower budget shows are expected to allocate 4.5% of their total budgets to COVIDrelat­ed costs.

The commission found 60% of the costs were related to materials and 40% were tied to labor costs.

When the pandemic struck last year, most production­s nationwide shut down in mid-March.

Employment in the motion picture sector — much of it concentrat­ed in Los Angeles County — fell to 98,000 jobs in August 2020, down 45% from February that year, according to data from the California Employment Developmen­t Department and the Bureau of Labor Statistics analyzed by Beacon Economics.

A coalition of entertainm­ent industry unions and studios agreed to terms for cast and crew to return to work in September 2020. Those provisions included requiremen­ts for social distancing, testing, sick pay and other safety measures.

Film production companies created new department­s to implement and enforce safety measures, including the new role of COVID compliance supervisor.

Producers also had to pay for tests, face shields and additional vehicles needed for social distancing.

Production has roared back in the past year as filming has resumed, with on-location filming in the Los Angeles area outpacing pre-pandemic levels.

The state’s film tax credit program allows producers to receive 20%-25% credits on certain qualified expenses, such as money spent on building sets and hiring crew members.

California allocates $330 million annually in film tax credits. The Legislatur­e expanded the program this summer, providing a new $150-million fund for the constructi­on of soundstage­s.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States