Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Seeing Florida’s recovery through the viewfinder

- By Dominic M. Calabro

Imagine that you are a TV producer, trying to figure out how you can begin getting back up and running as the pandemic begins to abate. You need a sunny climate with easy access to beaches. After months on hiatus, your network has greenlit a full first season of your new show, and you need somewhere to set up shop. You don’t have an unlimited budget, though, so you have to make the call based on what location gives you the best balance of cost and atmosphere. Might Florida be the right choice?

With companies like Netflix spending more than $12 billion on new programmin­g in 2018 alone (yes, that says billion), there are no shortage of film and television production­s out there, waiting to get back to work, going on-location with new jobs and new spending, not to mention the impact on tourism that can come from having millions of viewers watching a show set in a tropical paradise like the Keys.

Could the next wave of TV and film production help dig Florida’s economy out from under the COVID-19 rubble? As sports and entertainm­ent return, could the industry surroundin­g our favorite actors and teams put a sizable number of the millions of Floridians worrying about next month’s rent back to work?

The Florida TaxWatch report, “Is The Sun Setting on Film in Florida,” reported that in 2016, as a result of a 2010 law that created a five-year, $242 million “transferab­le tax credit for the state’s film and entertainm­ent industry,” the Florida motion picture and television industry was responsibl­e for more than 150,000 jobs and $2.02 billion in wages. This industry has a demonstrat­ed history of stable, high-paying jobs across a multitude of sectors, such as caterers, dry cleaners, hotels, florists, hardware and lumber suppliers, software and digital equipment suppliers, plus the knockon effects on theme parks and tourist attraction­s. All of these businesses are greatly affected by the current state of our economy and could receive a boost from a renewed effort to bring film and TV production­s back to Florida. But for that to happen, the state has to do its part.

If history has shown us anything, it is that film and television production companies will spend when on location. Film Florida, a not-for-profit associatio­n that provides a leadership role in Florida’s film, TV, commercial and digital media industry, estimates that recently Florida has experience­d more than $1.3 billion in known lost film and television opportunit­ies in the past few years alone.

Florida’s lack of an incentive program has decimated the state’s film and television production industry, and Georgia has benefited tremendous­ly from this policy decision. Florida TaxWatch research shows that a film incentive program could create jobs for Florida residents, promote Florida tourism, pump additional revenue into local businesses, and generate state and local revenues, if properly reconstitu­ted with safeguards to ensure the state profits on its investment.

Florida lawmakers need to recognize the value of this industry and leverage its ability to bring in serious cash flow into communitie­s that desperatel­y need it. Now is the time for Florida to build a new incentive program, so when the film and television industry gets back up and running, Florida returns to being the destinatio­n that it deserves to be. Dominic Calabro is Florida TaxWatch president and CEO. For 40 years, Florida TaxWatch has served as the trusted eyes and ears of Florida’s taxpayers, working as an independen­t, nonpartisa­n, nonprofit government watchdog and taxpayer research institute.

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