Legislator seeks to exempt cap for Hollywood tax credits

Legislator seeks to exempt cap for Hollywood tax credits

Spread the love

Legislators fear California will become noncompetitive again in attracting major film and TV productions if changes aren’t made to the state budget.

The $350 billion budget presents a $5 million cap in tax credits per project, or in Hollywood’s case, per TV show or movie, as outlined in Senate Bill 122. That would mean a reduction in current tax credits for productions with bigger budgets. The budget was passed June 29 by the Legislature and immediately signed into law by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

If the tax credit cap remains in effect, California will take steps backward to being noncompetitive against states with larger tax credits, said Assemblymember Rick Chavez Zbur, D-Hollywood.

Bringing movie and TV productions back to California has been a priority for Zbur, other legislators and Newsom. Last year, the Democratic governor more than doubled the California Film and TV Tax Credit program from $330 million to $750 million, The Center Square previously reported.

In light of the state’s priorities, Zbur, D-Hollywood, authored a letter to Newsom, who signed the budget into law; Senate President Pro Tempore Monique Limón, D-Santa Barbara, and Assembly Speaker Robert Rivas, D-Hollister, in which Zbur called for an exemption for the Hollywood tax credits.

Zbur asked Newsom and the legislative leadership to make discussions and amendments of the tax credit cap a priority before the legislative session ends in late August.

“For 100 years California was the home of film and television production. That is the past. What the Legislature does to address the problem created in SB 122 determines if that remains true into the future,” Zbur wrote in the letter, which was sent to The Center Square.

The letter has been signed by 39 legislators, and discussions have taken place in both houses of the Legislature.

“I am hopeful that we can just exempt this program because it is very different from the other things that it applies to,” Zbur told The Center Square during an interview Tuesday.

“All of us who have looked at this, believe that the cap, as it applies to this tax credit program, makes it noncompetitive with other states, and that means we will lose jobs and productions if we don’t fix it,” Zbur said.

Zbur cited lucrative tax credit programs in other states as one reason that productions are leaving California.

“We can’t let this stand out there where people that are making decisions on where to locate their productions look at California’s program and make a decision to go to Georgia or to go to New Jersey because our tax credit program is a fraction of the value of the programs in other states,” Zbur said.

Zbur suggested that smaller productions, anything less than a $15 million production, will not be affected by the tax credit cap, but larger productions, which were the focus of the program and make the state more competitive, will experience significant decreases in tax credits.

TV series that relocate to California are eligible for a 40% tax credit for their first season filmed in California, and films are eligible for a 35% tax credit, according to the California Film Commission.

A movie with $100 million in qualified expenses currently earns a $35 million tax credit, Zbur said. But under the state budget’s tax credits cap, the maximum credit would be $5 million.

That means producers would have to take more time and other routes to get the remaining $30 million, Zbur said. “So effectively for the larger productions, it makes the program noncompetitive with the other states.”

The current tax credit program has been effective, Zbur said. “It’s taken the first steps to start to turn the depression that the industry was facing around, and we need to not inject uncertainty to this program and go back to a program that’s not competitive again.”

Zbur said that while the Film and Television Tax Program is named a credit program, it’s really a jobs program.

Productions apply for the program and on a competitive basis are awarded the credits in return for creating jobs and bringing expenditures into the state, according to Zbur.

“They actually have to have detailed applications indicating how much spending is going to occur in the state of California, how much of it is qualified, the kind of expenditures that we know are going to benefit our small businesses, and how many jobs are going to be created,” Zbur said.

Zbur said he believes the addition of the cap on tax credits for film companies in the state budget was unintended since it was lumped together as part of a larger group with other kinds of businesses.

“The cap was put in place on a short-term basis in order to address other kinds of business tax write-offs, and because this is technically a tax program, it does apply to this, as it turns out,” Zbur said. “I don’t think that the Governor’s Office really understood the impact that this provision, which was buried in the bills, was going to have on the program.”

“This was not specifically aimed at the film and television tax credit,” Zbur further added.

Newsom reported $6.6 billion in estimated economic boosts as a result of the film tax credits, The Center Square previously reported.

Wayne Winegarden, a senior fellow in business and economics at Pasadena-based Pacific Research Institute, previously told The Center Square that the tax credits were a “bribe” to compensate for high taxes.

“Tax credits are just a means for the state to buy down its bad environment,” the economist said. “We overtax, we overregulate, which imposes costs, so to make the state competitive, we have to kind of give back some of that money.”

The Center Square reached out to Newsom’s office for an interview but instead was given the following statement.

“The Governor remains committed to making California the best place in the world to create film and television,” Marissa Saldivar, Newsom’s assistant deputy director of communications, told The Center Square via email. “The tax credit limitation is part of a broader fiscal proposal to ensure the state can continue making strategic investments while maintaining long-term fiscal stability. We remain confident in the strength of the recently expanded Film & Television Tax Credit Program.”

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois Quick Hits: CTA passenger set on fire in November leaves hospital

Illinois Quick Hits: CTA passenger set on fire in November leaves hospital

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A Chicago Transit Authority train passenger says she has been released from the hospital more than two...
House Oversight probes Rep. Ilhan Omar's husband's businesses

House Oversight probes Rep. Ilhan Omar’s husband’s businesses

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square The House Oversight Committee is investigating the rapid rise in value of two companies owned by Rep. Ilhan Omar's husband, amid concerns over financial transparency...

WATCH: IL Senate GOP proposes SAFE-T Act changes for domestic violence violations

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Illinois Senate Republican Leader John Curran says his caucus has proposed changes to the SAFE-T Act that...
Illinois open-burn bill ignites capitol clash

Illinois open-burn bill ignites capitol clash

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A proposal aimed at giving local fire protection districts more oversight of open burning in unincorporated...
AMA's medical education infused with political ideology, Do No Harm says

AMA’s medical education infused with political ideology, Do No Harm says

By Tate MillerThe Center Square In its ongoing fight against identity politics in medicine, Do No Harm exposed the American Medical Association this week for content related to identity politics...
Los Angeles police chief declines to enforce ICE mask ban

Los Angeles police chief declines to enforce ICE mask ban

By Chris WoodwardThe Center Square California has a new law that prohibits law enforcement from wearing masks, but don’t expect it to be enforced in Los Angeles. At least not...
Surge in gas-fired power for data centers, with Texas leading

Surge in gas-fired power for data centers, with Texas leading

By Alton WallaceThe Center Square The amount of gas-fired power generation in development in the U.S. nearly tripled over the past year to a record-high 252 gigawatts, with a third...
Entrepreneurs push back as Illinois city proposes new business registry

Entrepreneurs push back as Illinois city proposes new business registry

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Despite existing state registration requirements, Pontiac officials are proposing a new local business registration program aimed...
Benghazi attack suspect arrested, will face charges in U.S.

Benghazi attack suspect arrested, will face charges in U.S.

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square A suspect in a 2012 attack on a United States compound in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans was arrested and will be prosecuted in...
Canada looks to shift auto industry away from U.S.

Canada looks to shift auto industry away from U.S.

By Brett RowlandThe Center Square Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney wants his nation's auto industry to look far beyond its usual American market with investments in electric vehicles and other...
Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker's fiscal update blasts Trump administration

Illinois Quick Hits: Pritzker’s fiscal update blasts Trump administration

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – The Governor’s Office of Management and Budget says tax provisions in the Big Beautiful Bill Act would...
Will County Board Graphic.04

Capital Imp Committee Debates ‘Human Factor’ in Drafting New Artificial Intelligence Policy

Will County Capital Improvements & IT Committee Meeting | Jan. 6, 2026 Article Summary: The Will County Board Capital Improvements and IT Committee launched a comprehensive discussion on creating a...
Civil group seeks revival of student loan forgiveness lawsuit

Civil group seeks revival of student loan forgiveness lawsuit

By Esther WickhamThe Center Square The New Civil Liberties Alliance presented oral arguments before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit this week, after filing an opening brief...
Professor: California sees nation's least affordable electricity

Professor: California sees nation’s least affordable electricity

By Madeline ShannonThe Center Square California is experiencing the country's biggest hikes in electricity rates, according to new research from the Energy Institute at the Haas School of Business at...
December job openings lowest in five years

December job openings lowest in five years

By Morgan SweeneyThe Center Square Despite several quarters of strong GDP growth, job openings continued trending downward in December to an estimated 6.5 million – the lowest number in five...