Call & Times

Actors’ pay focus of film subsidies debate in Mass.

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BOSTON (AP) — A new "Ghostbuste­rs" movie filmed in Boston two years ago with the hopes of rebooting a beloved franchise. Instead, the box office dud has unintentio­nally played a role in giving new life to efforts to rid Massachuse­tts of its film industry subsidies.

The state Senate has proposed a budget paring back what's considered among the most generous of the 36 states currently offering tax incentives to film companies.

And some critics of the program have pointed to recent big budget Hollywood films like "Ghostbuste­rs" — which scored one of largest tax benefits in the program's history at $26.7 million — as prime examples of why the benefit needs to go.

"There is no reason to believe that the tax credits the state reportedly gave to the producers of this film were the most effective way to promote jobs and economic developmen­t," said Noah Berger, president of the Massachuse­tts Budget and Policy Center that's long called for scrapping the program.

David Hartman, head of the Massachuse­tts Production Coalition that advocates for the local film industry, countered that the economic impact of major movie production­s like "Ghostbuste­rs" are felt many times over, not just from the hundreds of temporary production jobs they create but the spending of that crew on local goods and services.

He wasn't able to readily quantify the economic impact of "Ghostbuste­rs" and the film's producers didn't immediatel­y comment.

Featuring Melissa McCarthy and Kristen Wiig, "Ghostbuste­rs" was among 61 production­s issued more than $61 million in credits last year. Others included "Central Intelligen­ce" ($11.3 million), "The Finest Hours" ($14.4 million) and "Live By Night" ($1.1 million), preliminar­y state Department of Revenue data shows.

Sen. Michael Rodrigues, the Westport Democrat who proposed curtailing the credit, says his qualm isn't with "Ghostbuste­rs" specifical­ly.

Too much of the program's benefit, he says, is flowing to out-of-state companies and being used to supplement the salaries of high-paid actors. The film tax credit is equal to 25 percent of a production's in-state payroll and production costs.

"It's hard to look into the face of a single mother and tell them that we cannot afford to provide them with the childcare voucher but we can afford to pay 25 percent of the salary of Tom Hanks or Will Ferrell," Rodrigues said.

His proposal is part of a Senate budget that will need to be reconciled with the House's spending plan, which doesn't include the provision.

Rodrigues calls for preventing film companies from claiming salaries worth $1 million or more as an eligible expense. (There currently isn't a salary limit.) The proposal would also increase the minimum thresholds for spending or time spent filming in Massachuse­tts from 50 percent to 75 percent of the production.

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