Albuquerque Journal

Incentives need to encourage filming outside ABQ-SF area

Current program weighted to keep production­s, crews in a 60-mile zone

- BY SEN. JEFF STEINBORN LAS CRUCES DEMOCRAT

Film incentives have successful­ly brought enormous economic opportunit­ies and benefits to parts of our state. Motion picture production­s bring in vast amounts of money from outside New Mexico, and provide direct economic impact to the communitie­s they are filmed in by employing hundreds of New Mexicans at above-average wages and boost the economy with spending at local businesses.

Unfortunat­ely, most communitie­s in New Mexico do not receive the benefits of film economic developmen­t because the state has created a film incentive system that largely benefits only one part of the state.

In 2013, film industry insiders created a film incentive structure in New Mexico designed to drive film business to Albuquerqu­e and Santa Fe. With the passage of the “Breaking Bad” film incentive bill in the 2013 session, the New Mexico Legislatur­e put into law two provisions that have had the dramatic effects of keeping 95% of the state’s film business in a 60-mile zone around Albuquerqu­e and Santa Fe.

The new incentives passed that session gave film production­s an extra rebate if they used a “qualified production facility,” aka a film studio, and an additional incentive for the making of a TV series. Because film studios, created with over $40 million of state LEDA funds to date, existed only in Albuquerqu­e and Santa Fe at that time, these new incentives all but ensured that most incoming film business would choose to use those facilities and film in those cities. The exclusiona­ry new incentives also created a snowball effect of creating only a union film workforce in that part of the state since there were no film jobs elsewhere. This has resulted in an economic disincenti­ve for films to locate anywhere else in New Mexico. And there’s never been a TV or streaming series based outside of Albuquerqu­e or Santa Fe.

All film production­s over essentiall­y a million-dollar budget must hire a union crew and the governing agreement for the largest film crew union, IATSE, requires film production­s to pay per diem, lodging and more for crew who travel more than 60 miles. Because it costs approximat­ely 11% more to locate a film more than 60 miles outside Bernalillo and Santa Fe counties, where the film crews are located, very few film production­s ever choose to film anywhere else. We need to fix this and allow citizens in the rest of the state to benefit from movie production.

Based on this inequity of the distributi­on of film economic developmen­t statewide, in 2019, the state created an “uplift” film incentive of an extra 5% to film production­s that located beyond the 60-mile higher crew cost boundary outside Bernalillo and Santa Fe counties. This was targeted precisely to help film production­s offset the extra costs to bring crew to other parts of the state to film. Since that time, this incentive has stimulated limited additional filming outside Santa Fe and Albuquerqu­e, yet filming in these areas still accounts for only 5% of all film spending in the state. The recent New Mexico Film Office Olsburg economic impact study concluded the 5% uplift incentive “is helping … but has not proven (to be) enough.”

It is essential for the Legislatur­e to increase the uplift film incentive to 10% to enable all communitie­s to compete effectivel­y for film and television projects. Communitie­s across New Mexico, from Farmington to Gallup and Tucumcari to Las Cruces and beyond, are working hard for their place in the film industry. They, too, have an abundance of beautiful and unique filming locations, and citizens who dream of working in, and benefiting from, the film industry. They deserve a fair shot at recruiting film production­s and will succeed only if we raise the uplift incentive.

While the Legislatur­e considers millions in additional incentives to help Netflix and the existing Albuquerqu­e-Santa Fe corridor, now is the time for the Legislatur­e and governor to commit to equity for all taxpayers and New Mexico communitie­s. We must boost the uplift film incentive as a part of any film incentive legislatio­n.

 ?? COURTESY OF NETFLIX ?? From left, Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Noah Schnapp as Will Byers and Millie Bobby Brown as Eleven in “Stranger Things.” The fourth season filmed in and around Albuquerqu­e, including at Roller King and Eldorado High School.
COURTESY OF NETFLIX From left, Finn Wolfhard as Mike Wheeler, Noah Schnapp as Will Byers and Millie Bobby Brown as Eleven in “Stranger Things.” The fourth season filmed in and around Albuquerqu­e, including at Roller King and Eldorado High School.
 ?? ?? Sen. Jeff Steinborn
Sen. Jeff Steinborn

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