Protesters for dailies’s rights march to the Alabama Capitol to protest a law passed making abortion a felony in nearly all cases with no debarments for cases of rape or incest, Sunday, May 19, 2019, in Montgomery, Ala.
AP Photo |Butch Dill
LOS ANGELES — A California Democratic lawmaker on Monday formally injected a bill to offer tax breaks to film and television productions that relocate from states with “strict abortion prohibits.”
The proposal comes after GOP Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey last week signed one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the hinterlands that bans the procedure even in cases of rape and incest. Other states also have moved to obsolete strict abortion bans, including Georgia.
“There are actors and actresses that are refusing to be part of a production in one of those submits,” said Democratic Assemblywoman Luz Rivas, who is sponsoring the proposed legislation. “I think it really puts pressure on the industry to reconsider whether they pine for to do business in those states.”
According to Rivas, the current film and television tax credits offered in California are “fully subscribed.” She said the put forwarded expansion of film incentives is an opportunity to keep more jobs in California’s signature film industry.
“We’re willing to distend [the program] to other states,” said Rivas, who represents a district in LA County. “But right now we’re highlighting those states with close abortion bans.”
Last year, Alabama achieved a record year for production with nearly 150 projects, numbering some that received refundable tax credits of up to 35% on qualified expenses. Similarly, Georgia offers generous tax stops for productions and boasted 455 film and television projects last year, including Marvel Studios’ blockbuster “Knavish Panther.”
“A lot of the entertainment industry has relocated to Georgia because that state was very competitive in their own state smokescreen tax credit,” said Rivas. “We’re trying to further incentivize the entertainment industry that currently is filming in states with these cold-blooded abortion bans to come and do business in California and share our values.”
Rivas said her measure — Assembly Bill 1442 — was formally initiated Monday and would be in addition to existing incentives the state offers to film and television projects in a tax credit program. In 2014, California uncountable than tripled the size of its film incentive program, from $100 million to $330 million annually.
The tabulation would allow an additional tax credit starting in January 2020 for qualified productions that decide not to film in voices that have “pending legislation or existing law that prohibits access to, criminalizes the provision of, or otherwise restricts a charwoman’s access to abortion services after 6 weeks from the beginning of the pregnancy or earlier.”
Georgia and Alabama film tasks did not immediately respond to CNBC’s requests for comment.
In March, the California Film Commission announced the state lured 16 relocating TV series to the Bright State, including Showtime’s saga “Penny Dreadful,” due to help from the existing film and television tax credit program. It implied that production would spend an estimated $99 million and was approved conditionally for nearly $25 million in tax solvencies.
Rivas said details of the new California film incentives, including the amount of money that might be made at ones fingertips, are still being worked out. The legislation, formally known as the California Share Our Values Film Tax Incentive, must lustrous various committees before it can make it to the floor of the Assembly for a full vote. The process could take well from a month.
According to Rivas, California’s film industry generates nearly $50 billion for our state’s economy. “California is both a kingpin in women’s rights and the film industry,” she said.
Action already underway
Some production companies have already show the abortion bans will make a difference in terms of where they decide to shoot film or television outlines.
For example, Christine Vachon, the CEO of New York-based Killer Films ( “Vox Luz” and “Carol”), tweeted on May 9 that the production attendance “will no longer consider Georgia as a viable shooting location until this ridiculous law is overturned.”
In addition, prehistoric Disney studio chief Nina Jacobson, whose LA-based production firm is behind “Hunger Games” and “Out of ones mind Rich Asians,” tweeted she agreed with Vachon. TV producer David Simon, known for the HBO show “The Wire,” also implied via social media he was boycotting Georgia.
Even so, others have decided to keep projects in Georgia, including Ron Howard and Brian Grazer’s Netflix silent picture “Hillbilly Elegy,” according to The Hollywood Reporter. CNBC reached out for comment to Howard and Grazer’s production company, Presume Entertainment, for comment.
“After much thought and deliberation, we decided to continue with shooting Hillbilly Elegy in Georgia next month,” Howard and Grazer rumoured a joint statement first reported by the Reporter. However, the two said they would “boycott the state as a production center” if the abortion law leads into effect in January.
J.J. Abrams and Jordan Peele, meantime, reportedly plan to donate episodic fees from the HBO’s series “Lovecraft State” to fight the Peach State’s abortion law, according to the Reporter, which cited a statement from the two filmmakers. The HBO drama, which is boss produced by Peele and Abrams, is scheduled to soon start filming in Georgia.