Showing posts with label AB 2026. Show all posts
Showing posts with label AB 2026. Show all posts

Friday, November 30, 2012

Assemblyman Gatto Forms Small-Business Advisory Commission

Seeks public input on regulatory and statutory reforms to improve the state’s business climate.
November 29, 2012


Assemblyman Mike Gatto (D-Los Angeles) is seeking applications from local business owners to serve on his District 43 Business Advisory Commission.  The commission will meet several times in the months ahead, with the goal of formulating one or more legislative proposals that would be introduced by Assemblyman Gatto in the 2013 state legislative session.


Assemblyman Gatto said he welcomes input from the people working hard to keep businesses thriving.

“We hear often that our business climate could be improved. I’m interested in hearing any proposal that would make the regulatory and statutory environment more sensible and less burdensome for local business owners. ”

Last year, the assemblyman authored or co-authored several bills to support small businesses including AB 1616 (The California Homemade Food Act), AB 2026 (The Film Industry Tax Credit), and AB 1900, which created an entirely new in-state biofuel industry. He hopes the commission will help him to identify even more common sense solutions to the challenges facing local businesses.

“As lawmakers, we have a sacred duty to listen to the needs and concerns of those who help our communities thrive, and to do what we can to support them,” said Gatto.

Anyone interested in participating on the commission should email Assemblyman Gatto at Assemblymember.Gatto@assembly.ca.gov with the subject line ‘Business Commission.’

You can read this story and more at the Crescenta Valley Weekly by clicking HERE

Mike Gatto is the chairman of the Appropriations Committee of the California State Assembly.  He represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, La CaƱada-Flintridge, La Crescenta, Montrose, the Los Angeles neighborhoods of Los Feliz, Silver Lake, Atwater Village, and portions of the Hollywood Hills and East Hollywood. 


Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Film Tax Credit Extension Signed by Gov. Brown



 

Posted by Mary O'Keefe on Oct 3rd, 2012 and filed under News. 


Governor Jerry Brown signed AB 2026 on Sunday, a bill authored by Assemblymember Felipe Fuentes and principally co-authored by Assemblyman Mike Gatto, which extends the California Film & Television Tax Credit Program by an additional two years and $200 million until July 1, 2017.  The original program was enacted in 2009 as part of a targeted effort to create jobs, increase production spending, and generate tax revenues for the State.

Since the beginning of this program, it is estimated that $728 million has been spent on local wages, to create an estimated 40,000 good jobs.  An additional 172,000 individuals are estimated to have received daily employment as background extras.  The tax credit can only be claimed after a film or television show has already been filmed, and an audit has taken place to prove that the expected jobs and economic development actually occurred in California.  Thus far, the tax credits have resulted in almost four-billion dollars in economic activity statewide.

“The film and television industries are an essential part of the California economy, especially in our part of the state,” said Gatto.  ”Hundreds of thousands of people are employed directly by these industries with millions working in related fields.”  ”The families who depend on those breadwinners are who I had in mind when I worked on this legislation.”

Today over forty U.S. states, New York City, and Canada, among others, offer substantial financial incentives to the film industry in an attempt to lure production and post-production jobs and spending away from California.  Thus, the California program specifically targets productions that are the most likely to leave the state due to incentives being offered in other states and countries.

Business leaders praised the legislation.  ”The Chamber applauds the Governor for signing AB 2026. Putting people back to work is the most important thing we can do on the road to economic recovery.  Production projects that qualify for this tax credit will generate millions of dollars in wages and production expenditures, while helping to keep and create thousands of jobs for California residents,” said Gary Toebben, President of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce.

“It is important that we make California competitive with other states in all industries,” said Gatto.  ”Film and television production are crucial to this area and to my constituents and neighbors.  This legislation is for them.”


Mike Gatto represents the cities of Burbank, Glendale, and parts of Los Angeles, including Los Feliz, Silver Lake, and Atwater Village.  He is the Chairman of the Assembly Appropriations Committee.  www.asm.ca.gov/gatto

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You can read this article and more at the Crescenta Valley Weekly by clicking HERE