A bipartisan group of Nevada lawmakers introduced a bill Thursday that would give massive tax credits aimed at bringing film production to southern Nevada, including a $1 billion Sony expansion.

Its the latest attempt at diversifying southern Nevadas gaming and tourism-reliant economy, which was hit hard by the pandemic.

The $190 million annually in tax credits for 20 years would be the largest proposed tax incentive package in recent state history, even after its deals with Tesla and Redwood Materials totaled hundreds of millions of dollars each. But unlike those deals, which used direct tax abatements, these tax credits would only be awarded upon completion of the films at studios built by private developers.

The legislation would involve the state entering an agreement with private developers who would pay for two film production sites one on the campus of the University of Nevada, Las Vegas and another in the Summerlin area of Las Vegas.

It creates a whole new industry in Nevada, the bills sponsor, Democratic state Sen. Roberta Lange of Las Vegas, said in an interview Thursday. I think it helps build and diversify our economy, which is something weve talked about in Nevada for as long as Ive lived here.

Even with a hearing scheduled for Tuesday, the bill faces a tight deadline and further complicates the final month of Nevadas legislative session, where Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo has sparred with the Democratic-controlled Legislature on its historic $11.6 billion budget.

It also comes as a funding bill to bring the Oakland As to Las Vegas is expected to drop any day. The As originally asked for $500 million in public assistance for a $1.5 billion stadium site, but have reportedly lowered that number.

A spokesperson for Lombardo, who promised no new taxes on the campaign trail, declined to comment on the film production tax credits bill.

In a statement, a Sony spokesperson said the company is supportive of the film industrys expansion into southern Nevada and would commit up to $1 billion on production over the next decade pending the passage of legislation guaranteeing a competitive Nevada production incentive.

Under the bill, production companies would apply for the transferable tax credits, which are used to offset the modified business tax, insurance premium tax or gaming license fee. The tax credits could be 30% of production and construction cost for films up from the current 15% threshold. Part of those tax credits would fund local workforce training and educational programs for jobs that the studios create.

The developers of the UNLV and Summerlin sites would foot the bill for development of the production studios, projected at $500 million and $400 million respectively by 2030.

The risk is really on the developers, not on the state of Nevada, said Republican Senate Minority Leader Heidi Seevers Gansert, of Reno, who co-sponsored the bill.

Brandon Birtcher, co-owner of Birtcher Development, which is developing the UNLV site, said its still being determined which film or content creator would use his site. Sony is planned for the Summerlin site, run by the Howard Hughes Corporation.

Tax incentives for some of the nations largest companies have become a major driver of recent efforts to diversify Nevadas economy. The Las Vegas area was hit particularly hard during the pandemic and is particularly reliant on gaming and tourism.

In northern Nevada, major tax incentives have focused on the U.S. transition to green energy. The governors economic development office awarded Tesla $330 million in tax abatements in March for a multi-billion dollar expansion near Reno, as well as $105 million in tax incentives to Redwood Materials in December, a massive lithium battery recycling plant in northern Nevada.


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