The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)
Officials calls for cutback of state’s film tax credit
of Economic and Community Development Commissioner David Lehman called on state lawmakers Thursday to consider capping or reducing Connecticut’s tax incentives for film, television and digital media production — programs that have drawn criticism for years from advocates who say the money would be better spent elsewhere.
Speaking at a joint hearing of three legislative committees to discuss his department’s 2021 Annual Report, Lehman highlighted pros and cons of several of the state’s business incentive programs. But he called specific attention to the film and digital media tax credits, saying they were among the incentives he believes are ripe for overhaul.
Lawmakers on the Appropriations, Commerce and Finance, Revenue & Bonding committees did not indicate where they stand on Lehman’s suggestion, but acknowledged the advice.
Established in 2006, the industry incentive programs have gone a long way toward establishing a thriving production ecosystem in Connecticut that employs thousands of people, Lehman said, but that’s come at a significant cost.
Under Connecticut’s Film and Digital Media Production Tax Credit, companies can receive — in the form of a tax credit — up to 30% off qualified production expenses or costs incurred in the state. There’s no cap on the amount they can claim per year.
In its 2019 annual report, DECD found that over the preceding decade, the average economic impact of the program had amounted to a loss of $58,510,604 in net revenue per year — well over half a billion dollars in all.
He recommended either capping the credit at a certain dollar amount, or reducing the percentment age. Public policy researchers with Connecticut Voices for Children have called for similar reforms to the program as far back as 2009.
Many states and countries offer similar incentives to film and media companies. That can create a competitive “race to the bottom,” analysts say, and taxpayers in many regions have pushed back.
Lehman noted that on a percapita basis, the cost of Connecticut’s film industry tax incentives was second only to one other state: Georgia. A recent audit of Georgia’s film industry incentives revealed waste and poor manageDepartment within the program. Georgia legislators considered capping the credit, but the proposal failed.
State auditors in Connecticut have also raised concerns about this state’s film tax credit programs. Last year, auditors reported that Connecticut overpaid one animation company, Blue Sky Studios, by almost $50 million during the fiscal years 2016 through 2019. Disney acquired Blue Sky Studios for $70 million in 2019, and shuttered the company last year — announcing the closure just two weeks after receiving a $32 million tax credit payment from the state.