Albuquerque Journal

SB 12 to ensure film industry here to stay

Rural incentives, inflation-adjusted cap, more post production in update

- BY ALICIA J. KEYES SECRETARY, N.M. ECONOMIC DEVELOPMEN­T DEPARTMENT AND AMBER DODSON

There’s little doubt the film and media business is booming in New Mexico.

Production­s can be seen everywhere you look — from “Dark Winds” in Tesuque Pueblo to “The Locksmith” in Las Cruces, to Netflix doubling its footprint with 10 additional stages at Albuquerqu­e Studios and starting production on a new miniseries that will provide jobs to 4,000 New Mexico cast and crew members.

New Mexico has become known internatio­nally, not just for its red or green chile and the Balloon Fiesta, but also as the home for such production­s as “Breaking Bad,” “Better Call Saul” and “Stranger Things.” The film industry has generated $1.5 billion in direct spend into New Mexico over the past two years. And we continue to receive national recognitio­n, the latest just a month ago when MovieMaker ranked three New Mexico cities as among the top 10 places to live and work in the film industry.

All of this is not an accident. New Mexico’s film industry is flourishin­g. More New Mexicans are working in this industry than ever before, earning higher wages and

coming back to the state to advance their careers.

In 2002, the state first enacted its Film and Television Production Tax Credit to take advantage of our stunning locations, the open and clear blue skies, our local talent and New Mexico’s proximity to Hollywood.

The tax credits have been amended nine times since — the latest in 2019 when Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and the New Mexico Legislatur­e establishe­d greater incentive for rural production­s,

increased the annual cap to $100 million, paid off the outstandin­g backlog in film credits, and incentiviz­ed capital investment into the state with the film partnershi­p initiative, a major reason we are seeing new studio and stage constructi­on in New Mexico.

The newly proposed Senate Bill 12 sponsored by Sen. Nancy Rodriguez, D-Santa Fe, continues the path of modernizin­g the film initiative­s to meet an evolving industry. This is more important than ever in order to create wellpaid jobs and diversify the economy. This is why Arizona, Texas, Colorado, Utah and Oklahoma all want a piece of the pie as they work to attract the production business now coming to New Mexico.

SB 12 will increase incentives for rural production­s, doubling the uplift to 10%. It will prudently adjust the cap by $10 million a year over a decade to allow for inflation and the growth of the industry. The bill also encourages more post-production work to stay in New Mexico and adjusts benchmarks for A-List talent that now push these production­s to film elsewhere.

Bringing billions of dollars into New Mexico from out of state and making sure production­s that film here hire New Mexico workers, and purchase goods and services from local businesses has been the strategic lynchpin for maintainin­g the incentive. But SB 12 goes further — it invests in our workforce.

The industry now supports 8,000 jobs in New Mexico — from film grip workers and makeup artists to casting agents, carpenters and hardware store owners. The average wage for a full-time film crew worker in New Mexico is now $32 an hour.

Anyone with a streaming account sees how media production is changing. SB 12 will future-proof New Mexico, so we can continue to grow a robust and highly paid workforce where employees, small businesses and families who depend on this industry can thrive.

 ?? COURTESY OF NEW MEXICO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMEN­T DEPARTMENT ?? Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson met Navajo Nation President Nez during a break in the filming of ‘Jumanji’ near Shiprock.
COURTESY OF NEW MEXICO ECONOMIC DEVELOPMEN­T DEPARTMENT Dwayne ‘The Rock’ Johnson met Navajo Nation President Nez during a break in the filming of ‘Jumanji’ near Shiprock.

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