Bill Text: CA SB1197 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Amended


Bill Title: Income and corporation taxes: credits: qualified motion

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2010-06-22 - Hearing postponed by committee. [SB1197 Detail]

Download: California-2009-SB1197-Amended.html
BILL NUMBER: SB 1197	AMENDED
	BILL TEXT

	AMENDED IN SENATE  MAY 27, 2010

INTRODUCED BY   Senator Calderon

                        FEBRUARY 18, 2010

   An act to repeal and amend Sections 17053.85 and 23685 of the
Revenue and Taxation Code, relating to taxation, to take effect
immediately, tax levy.



	LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST


   SB 1197, as amended, Calderon. Income and corporation taxes:
credits: qualified motion picture production.
   The Personal Income Tax Law and the Corporation Tax Law authorize
various credits against the taxes imposed by those laws, including a
credit, for taxable years beginning on or after January 1, 2011, in
an amount equal to a specified percentage of the qualified
expenditures, as defined, attributable to the production of a
qualified motion picture in California, or, where the qualified
motion picture has relocated to California or is an independent film,
as provided. Existing law limits the amount of credits that may be
allocated in any fiscal year, as specified, and prohibits the
allocation of any credits from a fiscal year other than the fiscal
year in which the credit was originally applied for or the
immediately succeeding fiscal year.
   This bill would delete that prohibition  and, for credits
allocated on or after the 2010-11 fiscal   year, specify the
taxable year in which the credit is allowed  .
   This bill would take effect immediately as a tax levy.
   Vote: majority. Appropriation: no. Fiscal committee: yes.
State-mandated local program: no.


THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA DO ENACT AS FOLLOWS:

  SECTION 1.  Section 17053.85 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as
added by Section 4 of Chapter 10 of the Third Extraordinary Session
of the Statutes of 2009, is repealed.
  SEC. 2.  Section 17053.85 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as
added by Section 4 of Chapter 17 of the Third Extraordinary Session
of the Statutes of 2009, is amended to read:
   17053.85.  (a) (1) For taxable years beginning on or after January
1, 2011, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer a credit
against the "net tax," as defined in Section 17039, in an amount
equal to the applicable percentage, as specified in paragraph (4), of
the qualified expenditures for the production of a qualified motion
picture in California.
   (2)  The   Subject to paragraph (5), the
 credit shall be allowed for the taxable year in which the
California Film Commission issues the credit certificate pursuant to
subdivision (g) for the qualified motion picture, and shall be for
the applicable percentage of all qualified expenditures paid or
incurred by the qualified taxpayer in all taxable years for that
qualified motion picture.
   (3) The amount of the credit allowed to a qualified taxpayer shall
be limited to the amount specified in the credit certificate issued
to the qualified taxpayer by the California Film Commission pursuant
to subdivision (g).
   (4) For purposes of paragraphs (1) and (2), the applicable
percentage shall be:
   (A) Twenty percent of the qualified expenditures attributable to
the production of a qualified motion picture in California.
   (B) Twenty-five percent of the qualified expenditures attributable
to the production of a qualified motion picture in California where
the qualified motion picture is a television series that relocated to
California or an independent film. 
   (5) If a qualified taxpayer is allocated a credit amount under
paragraph (2) of subdivision (i), the credit shall be allowed for the
taxable year specified by the California Film Commission in the
credit certificate issued by the commission pursuant to subdivision
(g). 
   (b) For purposes of this section:
   (1) "Ancillary product" means any article for sale to the public
that contains a portion of, or any element of, the qualified motion
picture.
   (2) "Budget" means an estimate of all expenses paid or incurred
during the production period of a qualified motion picture. It shall
be the same budget used by the qualified taxpayer and production
company for all qualified motion picture purposes.
   (3) "Clip use" means a use of any portion of a motion picture,
other than the qualified motion picture, used in the qualified motion
picture.
   (4) "Credit certificate" means the certificate issued by the
California Film Commission pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph
(2) of subdivision (g).
   (5) (A) "Employee fringe benefits" means the amount allowable as a
deduction under this part to the qualified taxpayer involved in the
production of the qualified motion picture, exclusive of any amounts
contributed by employees, for any year during the production period
with respect to any of the following:
   (i) Employer contributions under any pension, profit-sharing,
annuity, or similar plan.
   (ii) Employer-provided coverage under any accident or health plan
for employees.
   (iii) The employer's cost of life or disability insurance provided
to employees.
   (B) Any amount treated as wages under clause (i) of subparagraph
(A) of paragraph (18) shall not be taken into account under this
paragraph.
   (6) "Independent film" means a motion picture with a minimum
budget of one million dollars ($1,000,000) and a maximum budget of
ten million dollars ($10,000,000) that is produced by a company that
is not publicly traded and publicly traded companies do not own,
directly or indirectly, more than 25 percent of the producing
company.
   (7) "Licensing" means any grant of rights to distribute the
qualified motion picture, in whole or in part.
   (8) "New use" means any use of a motion picture in a medium other
than the medium for which it was initially created.
   (9) (A) "Postproduction" means the final activities in a qualified
motion picture's production, including editing, foley recording,
automatic dialogue replacement, sound editing, scoring and music
editing, beginning and end credits, negative cutting, negative
processing and duplication, the addition of sound and visual effects,
soundmixing, film-to-tape transfers, encoding, and color correction.

   (B) "Postproduction" does not include the manufacture or shipping
of release prints.
   (10) "Preproduction" means the process of preparation for actual
physical production which begins after a qualified motion picture has
received a firm agreement of financial commitment, or is greenlit,
with, for example, the establishment of a dedicated production
office, the hiring of key crew members, and includes, but is not
limited to, activities that include location scouting and execution
of contracts with vendors of equipment and stage space.
   (11) "Principal photography" means the phase of production during
which the motion picture is actually shot, as distinguished from
preproduction and postproduction.
   (12) "Production period" means the period beginning with
preproduction and ending upon completion of postproduction.
   (13) "Qualified entity" means a personal service corporation as
defined in Section 269A(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, a payroll
services corporation, or any entity receiving qualified wages with
respect to services performed by a qualified individual.
   (14) (A) "Qualified individual" means any individual who performs
services during the production period in an activity related to the
production of a qualified motion picture.
   (B) "Qualified individual" shall not include either of the
following:
   (i) Any individual related to the qualified taxpayer as described
in subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of Section 51(i)(1) of the Internal
Revenue Code.
   (ii) Any 5 percent owner, as defined in Section 416(i)(1)(B) of
the Internal Revenue Code, of the qualified taxpayer.
   (15) (A) "Qualified motion picture" means a motion picture that is
produced for distribution to the general public, regardless of
medium that is one of the following:
   (i) A feature with a minimum production budget of one million
dollars ($1,000,000) and a maximum production budget of seventy-five
million dollars ($75,000,000).
   (ii) A movie of the week or miniseries with a minimum production
budget of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000).
   (iii) A new television series produced in California with a
minimum production budget of one million dollars ($1,000,000)
licensed for original distribution on basic cable.
   (iv) An independent film.
   (v) A television series that relocated to California.
   (B) To qualify as a "qualified motion picture," all of the
following conditions shall be satisfied:
   (i) At least 75 percent of the production days occur wholly in
California or 75 percent of the production budget is incurred for
payment for services performed within the state and the purchase or
rental of property used within the state.
   (ii) Production of the qualified motion picture is completed
within 30 months from the date on which the qualified taxpayer's
application is approved by the California Film Commission. For
purposes of this section, a qualified motion picture is "completed"
when the process of postproduction has been finished.
   (iii) The copyright for the motion picture is registered with the
United States Copyright Office pursuant to Title 17 of the United
States Code.
   (iv) Principal photography of the qualified motion picture
commences after the date on which the application is approved by the
California Film Commission, but no later than 180 days after the date
of that approval.
   (C) For the purposes of subparagraph (A), in computing the total
wages paid or incurred for the production of a qualified motion
picture, all amounts paid or incurred by all persons or entities that
share in the costs of the qualified motion picture shall be
aggregated.
   (D) "Qualified motion picture" shall not include commercial
advertising, music videos, a motion picture produced for private
noncommercial use, such as weddings, graduations, or as part of an
educational course and made by students, a news program, current
events or public events program, talk show, game show, sporting event
or activity, awards show, telethon or other production that solicits
funds, reality television program, clip-based programming if more
than 50 percent of the content is comprised of licensed footage,
documentaries, variety programs, daytime dramas, strip shows,
one-half hour (air time) episodic television shows, or any production
that falls within the recordkeeping requirements of Section 2257 of
Title 18 of the United States Code.
   (16) "Qualified expenditure" means amounts paid or incurred to
purchase or lease tangible personal property used within this state
in the production of a qualified motion picture and payments,
including qualified wages, for services performed within this state
in the production of a qualified motion picture.
   (17) (A) "Qualified taxpayer" means a taxpayer who has paid or
incurred qualified expenditures and has been issued a credit
certificate by the California Film Commission pursuant to subdivision
(g).
   (B) In the case of any passthrough entity, the determination of
whether a taxpayer is a qualified taxpayer under this section shall
be made at the entity level and any credit under this section is not
allowed to the passthrough entity, but shall be passed through to the
partners or shareholders in accordance with applicable provisions of
Part 10 (commencing with Section 17001) or Part 11 (commencing with
Section 23001). For purposes of this paragraph, "passthrough entity"
means any entity taxed as a partnership or "S" corporation.
   (18) (A) "Qualified wages" means all of the following:
   (i) Any wages required to be reported under Section 13050 of the
Unemployment Insurance Code that were paid or incurred by any
taxpayer involved in the production of a qualified motion picture
with respect to a qualified individual for services performed on the
qualified motion picture production within this state.
   (ii) The portion of any employee fringe benefits paid or incurred
by any taxpayer involved in the production of the qualified motion
picture that are properly allocable to qualified wage amounts
described in clause (i).
   (iii) Any payments made to a qualified entity for services
performed in this state by qualified individuals within the meaning
of paragraph (14).
   (iv) Remuneration paid to an independent contractor who is a
qualified individual for services performed within this state by that
qualified individual.
   (B) "Qualified wages" shall not include any of the following:
   (i) Expenses, including wages, related to new use, reuse, clip
use, licensing, secondary markets, or residual compensation, or the
creation of any ancillary product, including, but not limited to, a
soundtrack album, toy, game, trailer, or teaser.
   (ii) Expenses, including wages, paid or incurred with respect to
acquisition, development, turnaround, or any rights thereto.
   (iii) Expenses, including wages, related to financing, overhead,
marketing, promotion, or distribution of a qualified motion picture.
   (iv) Expenses, including wages, paid per person per qualified
motion picture for writers, directors, music directors, music
composers, music supervisors, producers, and performers, other than
background actors with no scripted lines.
   (19) "Residual compensation" means supplemental compensation paid
at the time that a motion picture is exhibited through new use,
reuse, clip use, or in secondary markets, as distinguished from
payments made during production.
   (20) "Reuse" means any use of a qualified motion picture in the
same medium for which it was created, following the initial use in
that medium.
   (21) "Secondary markets" means media in which a qualified motion
picture is exhibited following the initial media in which it is
exhibited.
   (22) "Television series that relocated to California" means a
television series, without regard to episode length or initial media
exhibition, that filmed all of its prior season or seasons outside of
California and for which the taxpayer certifies that the credit
provided pursuant to this section is the primary reason for
relocating to California.
   (c) (1) Notwithstanding any other law, a qualified taxpayer may
sell any credit allowed under this section that is attributable to an
independent film, as defined in paragraph (6) of subdivision (b), to
an unrelated party.
   (2) The qualified taxpayer shall report to the Franchise Tax Board
prior to the sale of the credit, in the form and manner specified by
the Franchise Tax Board, all required information regarding the
purchase and sale of the credit, including the social security or
other taxpayer identification number of the unrelated party to whom
the credit has been sold, the face amount of the credit sold, and the
amount of consideration received by the qualified taxpayer for the
sale of the credit.
   (3) In the case where the credit allowed under this section
exceeds the "net tax," the excess credit may be carried over to
reduce the "net tax" in the following taxable year, and succeeding
five taxable years, if necessary, until the credit has been
exhausted.
   (4) A credit shall not be sold pursuant to this subdivision to
more than one taxpayer, nor may the credit be resold by the unrelated
party to another taxpayer or other party.
   (5) A party that has acquired tax credits under this section shall
be subject to the requirements of this section.
   (6) In no event may a qualified taxpayer assign or sell any tax
credit to the extent the tax credit allowed by this section is
claimed on any tax return of the qualified taxpayer.
   (7) In the event that both the taxpayer originally allocated a
credit under this section by the California Film Commission and a
taxpayer to whom the credit has been sold both claim the same amount
of credit on their tax returns, the Franchise Tax Board may disallow
the credit of either taxpayer, so long as the statute of limitations
upon assessment remains open.
   (8) Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of
Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code does not apply to any
standard, criterion, procedure, determination, rule, notice, or
guideline established or issued by the Franchise Tax Board pursuant
to this subdivision.
   (d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the
qualified taxpayer provides the following to the California Film
Commission:
   (1) Identification of each qualified individual.
   (2) The specific start and end dates of production.
   (3) The total wages paid.
   (4) The amount of qualified wages paid to each qualified
individual.
   (5) The copyright registration number, as reflected on the
certificate of registration issued under the authority of Section 410
of Title 17 of the United States Code, relating to registration of
claim and issuance of certificate. The registration number shall be
provided on the return claiming the credit.
   (6) The total amounts paid or incurred to purchase or lease
tangible personal property used in the production of a qualified
motion picture.
   (7) Information to substantiate its qualified expenditures.
   (8) Information required by the California Film Commission under
regulations promulgated pursuant to subdivision (g) necessary to
verify the amount of credit claimed.
   (e) The California Film Commission may prescribe rules and
regulations to carry out the purposes of this section including any
rules and regulations necessary to establish procedures, processes,
requirements, and rules identified in or required to implement this
section. The regulations shall include provisions to set aside a
percentage of annual credit allocations for independent films.
   (f) If the qualified taxpayer fails to provide the copyright
registration number as required in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d),
the credit shall be disallowed and assessed and collected under
Section 19051 until the procedures are satisfied.
   (g) For purposes of this section, the California Film Commission
shall do the following:
   (1) On, or after, July 1, 2009, and before July 1, 2014, allocate
tax credits to applicants.
   (A) Establish a procedure for applicants to file with the
commission a written application, on a form jointly prescribed by the
commission and the Franchise Tax Board for the allocation of the tax
credit. The application shall include, but not be limited to, the
following information:
   (i) The budget for the motion picture production.
   (ii) The number of production days.
   (iii) A financing plan for the production.
   (iv) The diversity of the workforce employed by the applicant,
including, but not limited to, the ethnic and racial makeup of the
individuals employed by the applicant during the production of the
qualified motion picture, to the extent possible.
   (v) Any other information deemed relevant by the commission or the
Franchise Tax Board.
   (B) Establish criteria, consistent with the requirements of this
section, for allocating tax credits.
   (C) Determine and designate applicants who meet the requirements
of this section.
   (D) Process and approve, or reject, all applications on a
first-come-first-served basis.
   (E)  (i)    Subject to the annual cap
established as provided in subdivision (i), allocate an aggregate
amount of credits under this section and Section 23685, and allocate
any carryover of unallocated credits from prior years. 
   (ii) If a qualified taxpayer is allocated a credit amount under
paragraph (2) of subdivision (i), specify the taxable year in which
the credit is allowed. The California Film Commission shall establish
a procedure to, on a first-come-first served basis, assign a
qualified taxpayer the taxable year in which the credit shall be
allowed. The aggregate credit amount allowed for any taxable year
shall not exceed the annual cap for that taxable year, plus any
carryover of unallocated credits from prior years. 
   (2) Certify tax credits allocated to qualified taxpayers.
   (A) Establish a verification procedure for the amount of qualified
expenditures paid or incurred by the applicant.
   (B) Establish audit requirements that must be satisfied before a
credit certificate may be issued by the California Film Commission.
   (C)  (i)    Issue a credit certificate to a
qualified taxpayer upon completion of the qualified motion picture
reflecting the credit amount allocated after qualified expenditures
have been verified under this section. The amount of credit shown in
the credit certificate shall not exceed the amount of credit
allocated to that qualified taxpayer pursuant to this section. 
   (ii) For credit certificates issued on or after July 1, 2010, the
credit certificate shall specify the taxable year for which the
credit is allowed. 
   (h) The California Film Commission shall provide the Franchise Tax
Board annually with a list of qualified taxpayers and the tax credit
amounts allocated to each qualified taxpayer by the California Film
Commission. The list shall include the names and taxpayer
identification numbers, including taxpayer identification numbers of
each partner or shareholder, as applicable, of the qualified
taxpayers.
   (i) (1) The aggregate amount of credits that may be allocated in
any fiscal year pursuant to this section and Section 23686 shall be
an amount equal to the sum of all of the following:
   (A) One hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in credits for the
2009-10 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, through and
including the 2013-14 fiscal year.
   (B) The unused allocation credit amount, if any, for the preceding
fiscal year.
   (C) The amount of previously allocated credits not certified.
   (2)  If   Beginning in the 2010-11 fiscal
year, if  the amount of credits applied for in any particular
fiscal year exceeds the aggregate amount of tax credits authorized to
be allocated under this section, such excess shall be treated as
having been applied for on the first day of the next fiscal year in
which credits are available.
   (3) Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Film Commission shall set
aside up to ten million ($10,000,000) of tax credits each fiscal year
for independent films allocated in accordance with rules and
regulations developed pursuant to subdivision (e).
   (4) Any act that reduces the amount that may be allocated pursuant
to paragraph (1) constitutes a change in state taxes for the purpose
of increasing revenues within the meaning of Section 3 of Article
XIII A of the California Constitution and may be passed by not less
than two-thirds of all Members elected to each of the two houses of
the Legislature.
   (j) The film commission shall have the authority to allocate tax
credits in accordance with this section and in accordance with any
regulations prescribed pursuant to subdivision (e) upon adoption.
  SEC. 3.  Section 23685 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as added
by Section 9 of Chapter 10 of the Third Extraordinary Session of the
Statutes of 2009, is repealed.
  SEC. 4.  Section 23685 of the Revenue and Taxation Code, as added
by Section 9 of Chapter 17 of the Third Extraordinary Session of the
Statutes of 2009, is amended to read:
   23685.  (a) (1) For taxable years beginning on or after January 1,
2011, there shall be allowed to a qualified taxpayer a credit
against the "tax," as defined in Section 23036, in an amount equal to
the applicable percentage, as specified in paragraph (4), of the
qualified expenditures for the production of a qualified motion
picture in California.
   (2)  The   Subject to paragraph (5), the
 credit shall be allowed for the taxable year in which the
California Film Commission issues the credit certificate pursuant to
subdivision (g) for the qualified motion picture, and shall be for
the applicable percentage of all qualified expenditures paid or
incurred by the qualified taxpayer in all taxable years for that
qualified motion picture.
   (3) The amount of the credit allowed to a qualified taxpayer shall
be limited to the amount specified in the credit certificate issued
to the qualified taxpayer by the California Film Commission pursuant
to subdivision (g).
   (4) For purposes of paragraphs (1) and (2), the applicable
percentage shall be:
   (A) Twenty percent of the qualified expenditures attributable to
the production of a qualified motion picture in California.
   (B) Twenty-five percent of the qualified expenditures attributable
to the production of a qualified motion picture in California where
the qualified motion picture is a television series that relocated to
California or an independent film. 
   (5) If a qualified taxpayer is allocated a credit amount under
paragraph (2) of subdivision (i), the credit shall be allowed for the
taxable year specified by the California Film Commission in the
credit certificate issued by the commission pursuant to subdivision
(g). 
   (b) For purposes of this section:
   (1) "Ancillary product" means any article for sale to the public
that contains a portion of, or any element of, the qualified motion
picture.
   (2) "Budget" means an estimate of all expenses paid or incurred
during the production period of a qualified motion picture. It shall
be the same budget used by the qualified taxpayer and production
company for all qualified motion picture purposes.
   (3) "Clip use" means a use of any portion of a motion picture,
other than the qualified motion picture, used in the qualified motion
picture.
   (4) "Credit certificate" means the certificate issued by the
California Film Commission pursuant to subparagraph (C) of paragraph
(2) of subdivision (g).
   (5) (A) "Employee fringe benefits" means the amount allowable as a
deduction under this part to the qualified taxpayer involved in the
production of the qualified motion picture, exclusive of any amounts
contributed by employees, for any year during the production period
with respect to any of the following:
   (i) Employer contributions under any pension, profit-sharing,
annuity, or similar plan.
   (ii) Employer-provided coverage under any accident or health plan
for employees.
   (iii) The employer's cost of life or disability insurance provided
to employees.
   (B) Any amount treated as wages under clause (i) of subparagraph
(A) of paragraph (18) shall not be taken into account under this
paragraph.
   (6) "Independent film" means a motion picture with a minimum
budget of one million dollars ($1,000,000) and a maximum budget of
ten million dollars ($10,000,000) that is produced by a company that
is not publicly traded and publicly traded companies do not own,
directly or indirectly, more than 25 percent of the producing
company.
   (7) "Licensing" means any grant of rights to distribute the
qualified motion picture, in whole or in part.
   (8) "New use" means any use of a motion picture in a medium other
than the medium for which it was initially created.
   (9) (A) "Postproduction" means the final activities in a qualified
motion picture's production, including editing, foley recording,
automatic dialogue replacement, sound editing, scoring and music
editing, beginning and end credits, negative cutting, negative
processing and duplication, the addition of sound and visual effects,
soundmixing, film-to-tape transfers, encoding, and color correction.

   (B) "Postproduction" does not include the manufacture or shipping
of release prints.
   (10) "Preproduction" means the process of preparation for actual
physical production which begins after a qualified motion picture has
received a firm agreement of financial commitment, or is greenlit,
with, for example, the establishment of a dedicated production
office, the hiring of key crew members, and includes, but is not
limited to, activities that include location scouting and execution
of contracts with vendors of equipment and stage space.
   (11) "Principal photography" means the phase of production during
which the motion picture is actually shot, as distinguished from
preproduction and postproduction.
   (12) "Production period" means the period beginning with
preproduction and ending upon completion of postproduction.
     (13) "Qualified entity" means a personal service corporation as
defined in Section 269A(b)(1) of the Internal Revenue Code, a payroll
services corporation, or any entity receiving qualified wages with
respect to services performed by a qualified individual.
   (14) (A) "Qualified individual" means any individual who performs
services during the production period in an activity related to the
production of a qualified motion picture.
   (B) "Qualified individual" shall not include either of the
following:
   (i) Any individual related to the qualified taxpayer as described
in subparagraph (A), (B), or (C) of Section 51(i)(1) of the Internal
Revenue Code.
   (ii) Any 5 percent owner, as defined in Section 416(i)(1)(B) of
the Internal Revenue Code, of the qualified taxpayer.
   (15) (A) "Qualified motion picture" means a motion picture that is
produced for distribution to the general public, regardless of
medium that is one of the following:
   (i) A feature with a minimum production budget of one million
dollars ($1,000,000) and a maximum production budget of seventy-five
million dollars ($75,000,000).
   (ii) A movie of the week or miniseries with a minimum production
budget of five hundred thousand dollars ($500,000).
   (iii) A new television series produced in California with a
minimum production budget of one million dollars ($1,000,000)
licensed for original distribution on basic cable.
   (iv) An independent film.
   (v) A television series that relocated to California.
   (B) To qualify as a "qualified motion picture," all of the
following conditions shall be satisfied:
   (i) At least 75 percent of the production days occur wholly in
California or 75 percent of the production budget is incurred for
payment for services performed within the state and the purchase or
rental of property used within the state.
   (ii) Production of the qualified motion picture is completed
within 30 months from the date on which the qualified taxpayer's
application is approved by the California Film Commission. For
purposes of this section, a qualified motion picture is "completed"
when the process of postproduction has been finished.
   (iii) The copyright for the motion picture is registered with the
United States Copyright Office pursuant to Title 17 of the United
States Code.
   (iv) Principal photography of the qualified motion picture
commences after the date on which the application is approved by the
California Film Commission, but no later than 180 days after the date
of that approval.
   (C) For the purposes of subparagraph (A), in computing the total
wages paid or incurred for the production of a qualified motion
picture, all amounts paid or incurred by all persons or entities that
share in the costs of the qualified motion picture shall be
aggregated.
   (D) "Qualified motion picture" shall not include commercial
advertising, music videos, a motion picture produced for private
noncommercial use, such as weddings, graduations, or as part of an
educational course and made by students, a news program, current
events or public events program, talk show, game show, sporting event
or activity, awards show, telethon or other production that solicits
funds, reality television program, clip-based programming if more
than 50 percent of the content is comprised of licensed footage,
documentaries, variety programs, daytime dramas, strip shows,
one-half hour (air time) episodic television shows, or any production
that falls within the recordkeeping requirements of Section 2257 of
Title 18 of the United States Code.
   (16) "Qualified expenditures" means amounts paid or incurred to
purchase or lease tangible personal property used within this state
in the production of a qualified motion picture and payments,
including qualified wages, for services performed within this state
in the production of a qualified motion picture.
   (17) (A) "Qualified taxpayer" means a taxpayer who has paid or
incurred qualified expenditures and has been issued a credit
certificate by the California Film Commission pursuant to subdivision
(g).
   (B) (i) In the case of any passthrough entity, the determination
of whether a taxpayer is a qualified taxpayer under this section
shall be made at the entity level and any credit under this section
is not allowed to the passthrough entity, but shall be passed through
to the partners or shareholders in accordance with applicable
provisions of Part 10 (commencing with Section 17001) or Part 11
(commencing with Section 23001). For purposes of this paragraph,
"passthrough entity" means any entity taxed as a partnership or "S"
corporation.
   (ii) In the case of an "S" corporation, the credit allowed under
this section shall not be used by an "S" corporation as a credit
against a tax imposed under Chapter 4.5 (commencing with Section
23800) of Part 11 of Division 2.
   (18) (A) "Qualified wages" means all of the following:
   (i) Any wages required to be reported under Section 13050 of the
Unemployment Insurance Code that were paid or incurred by any
taxpayer involved in the production of a qualified motion picture
with respect to a qualified individual for services performed on the
qualified motion picture production within California.
   (ii) The portion of any employee fringe benefits paid or incurred
by any taxpayer involved in the production of the qualified motion
picture that are properly allocable to qualified wage amounts
described in clause (i).
   (iii) Any payments made to a qualified entity for services
performed in California by qualified individuals within the meaning
of paragraph (14).
   (iv) Remuneration paid to an independent contractor who is a
qualified individual for services performed within California by that
qualified individual.
   (B) "Qualified wages" shall not include any of the following:
   (i) Expenses, including wages, related to new use, reuse, clip
use, licensing, secondary markets, or residual compensation, or the
creation of any ancillary product, including, but not limited to, a
soundtrack album, toy, game, trailer, or teaser.
   (ii) Expenses, including wages, paid or incurred with respect to
acquisition, development, turnaround, or any rights thereto.
   (iii) Expenses, including wages, related to financing, overhead,
marketing, promotion, or distribution of a qualified motion picture.
   (iv) Expenses, including wages, paid per person per qualified
motion picture for writers, directors, music directors, music
composers, music supervisors, producers, and performers, other than
background actors with no scripted lines.
   (19) "Residual compensation" means supplemental compensation paid
at the time that a motion picture is exhibited through new use,
reuse, clip use, or in secondary markets, as distinguished from
payments made during production.
   (20) "Reuse" means any use of a qualified motion picture in the
same medium for which it was created, following the initial use in
that medium.
   (21) "Secondary markets" means media in which a qualified motion
picture is exhibited following the initial media in which it is
exhibited.
   (22) "Television series that relocated to California" means a
television series, without regard to episode length or initial media
exhibition, that filmed all of its prior season or seasons outside of
California and for which the taxpayer certifies that the credit
provided pursuant to this section is the primary reason for
relocating to California.
   (c) (1) Notwithstanding subdivision (i) of Section 23036, relating
to credits attributable to a passthrough business entity, in the
case where the credit allowed by this section exceeds the taxpayer's
tax liability computed under this part, a qualified taxpayer may
elect to assign any portion of the credit allowed under this section
to one or more affiliated corporations for each taxable year in which
the credit is allowed. For purposes of this subdivision, "affiliated
corporation" has the meaning provided in subdivision (b) of Section
25110, as that section was amended by Chapter 881 of the Statutes of
1993, as of the last day of the taxable year in which the credit is
allowed, except that "100 percent" is substituted for "more than 50
percent" wherever it appears in the section, and "voting common stock"
is substituted for "voting stock" wherever it appears in the
section.
   (2) The election provided in paragraph (1):
   (A) May be based on any method selected by the qualified taxpayer
that originally receives the credit.
   (B) Shall be irrevocable for the taxable year the credit is
allowed, once made.
   (C) May be changed for any subsequent taxable year if the election
to make the assignment is expressly shown on each of the returns of
qualified taxpayer and a qualified taxpayer's affiliated corporations
that assign and receive the credits.
   (3) (A) Notwithstanding any other law, a qualified taxpayer, may
sell any credit allowed under this section that is attributable to an
independent film, as defined in paragraph (6) of subdivision (b), to
an unrelated party.
   (B) The qualified taxpayer shall report to the Franchise Tax Board
prior to the sale of the credit, in the form and manner specified by
the Franchise Tax Board, all required information regarding the
purchase and sale of the credit, including the social security or
other taxpayer identification number of the unrelated party to whom
the credit has been sold, the face amount of the credit sold, and the
amount of consideration received by the qualified taxpayer for the
sale of the credit.
   (4) In the case where the credit allowed under this section
exceeds the "tax," the excess credit may be carried over to reduce
the "tax" in the following taxable year, and succeeding five taxable
years, if necessary, until the credit has been exhausted.
   (5) A credit shall not be sold pursuant to this subdivision to
more than one taxpayer, nor may the credit be resold by the unrelated
party to another taxpayer or other party.
   (6) A party that has been assigned or acquired tax credits under
this paragraph shall be subject to the requirements of this section.
   (7) In no event may a qualified taxpayer assign or sell any tax
credit to the extent the tax credit allowed by this section is
claimed on any tax return of the qualified taxpayer.
   (8) In the event that both the taxpayer originally allocated a
credit under this section by the California Film Commission and a
taxpayer to whom the credit has been sold both claim the same amount
of credit on their tax returns, the Franchise Tax Board may disallow
the credit of either taxpayer, so long as the statute of limitations
upon assessment remains open.
   (9) Chapter 3.5 (commencing with Section 11340) of Part 1 of
Division 3 of Title 2 of the Government Code does not apply to any
standard, criterion, procedure, determination, rule, notice, or
guideline established or issued by the Franchise Tax Board pursuant
to this subdivision.
   (d) No credit shall be allowed pursuant to this section unless the
qualified taxpayer provides the following to the California Film
Commission:
   (1) Identification of each qualified individual.
   (2) The specific start and end dates of production.
   (3) The total wages paid.
   (4) The amount of qualified wages paid to each qualified
individual.
   (5) The copyright registration number, as reflected on the
certificate of registration issued under the authority of Section 410
of Title 17 of the United States Code, relating to registration of
claim and issuance of certificate. The registration number shall be
provided on the return claiming the credit.
   (6) The total amounts paid or incurred to purchase or lease
tangible personal property used in the production of a qualified
motion picture.
   (7) Information to substantiate its qualified expenditures.
   (8) Information required by the California Film Commission under
regulations promulgated pursuant to subdivision (g) necessary to
verify the amount of credit claimed.
   (e) The California Film Commission may prescribe rules and
regulations to carry out the purposes of this section including any
rules and regulations necessary to establish procedures, processes,
requirements, and rules identified in or required to implement this
section. The regulations shall include provisions to set aside a
percentage of annual credit allocations for independent films.
   (f) If the qualified taxpayer fails to provide the copyright
registration number as required in paragraph (5) of subdivision (d),
the credit shall be disallowed and assessed and collected under
Section 19051 until the procedures are satisfied.
   (g) For purposes of this section, the California Film Commission
shall do the following:
   (1) On or after July 1, 2009, and before July 1, 2014, allocate
tax credits to applicants.
   (A) Establish a procedure for applicants to file with the
commission a written application, on a form jointly prescribed by the
commission and the Franchise Tax Board for the allocation of the tax
credit. The application shall include, but not be limited to, the
following information:
   (i) The budget for the motion picture production.
   (ii) The number of production days.
   (iii) A financing plan for the production.
   (iv) The diversity of the workforce employed by the applicant,
including, but not limited to, the ethnic and racial makeup of the
individuals employed by the applicant during the production of the
qualified motion picture, to the extent possible.
   (v) Any other information deemed relevant by the commission or the
Franchise Tax Board.
   (B) Establish criteria, consistent with the requirements of this
section, for allocating tax credits.
   (C) Determine and designate applicants who meet the requirements
of this section.
   (D) Process and approve, or reject, all applications on a
first-come-first-served basis.
   (E)  (i)    Subject to the annual cap
established as provided in subdivision (i), allocate an aggregate
amount of credits under this section and Section 17053.85, and
allocate any carryover of unallocated credits from prior years. 
   (ii) If a qualified taxpayer is allocated a credit amount under
paragraph (2) of subdivision (i), specify the taxable year in which
the credit is allowed. The California Film Commission shall establish
a procedure to, on a first-come-first-served basis, assign a
qualified taxpayer the taxable year in which the credit shall be
allowed. The aggregate credit amount allowed for any taxable year
shall not exceed the annual cap for that taxable year, plus any
carryover of unallocated credits from prior years. 
   (2) Certify tax credits allocated to qualified taxpayers.
   (A) Establish a verification procedure for the amount of qualified
expenditures paid or incurred by the applicant.
   (B) Establish audit requirements that must be satisfied before a
credit certificate maybe issued by the California Film Commission.
   (C)  (i)    Issue a credit certificate to a
qualified taxpayer upon completion of the qualified motion picture,
reflecting the credit amount allocated after qualified expenditures
have been verified under this section. The amount of a credit shown
in the credit certificate shall not exceed the amount of credit
allocated to that qualified taxpayer pursuant to this section. 
   (ii) For credit certificates issued on or after July 1, 2010, the
credit certificate shall specify the taxable year for which the
credit is allowed. 
   (h) The California Film Commission shall provide the Franchise Tax
Board and the board annually with a list of qualified taxpayers and
the tax credit amounts allocated to each qualified taxpayer by the
California Film Commission. The list shall include the names and
taxpayer identification numbers, including taxpayer identification
numbers of each partner or shareholder, as applicable, of the
qualified taxpayer.
   (i) (1) The aggregate amount of credits that may be allocated in
any fiscal year pursuant to this section and Section 17053.85 shall
be an amount equal to the sum of all of the following:
   (A) One hundred million dollars ($100,000,000) in credits for the
2009-10 fiscal year and each fiscal year thereafter, through and
including the 2013-14 fiscal year.
   (B) The unused allocation credit amount, if any, for the preceding
fiscal year.
   (C) The amount of previously allocated credits not certified.
   (2)  If   Beginning   in the 2010-11
fiscal year, if  the amount of credits applied for in any
particular fiscal year exceeds the aggregate amount of tax credits
authorized to be allocated under this section, such excess shall be
treated as having been applied for on the first day of the next
fiscal year in which credits are available.
   (3) Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Film Commission shall set
aside up to ten million ($10,000,000) of tax credits each fiscal year
for independent films allocated in accordance with rules and
regulations developed pursuant to subdivision (e).
   (4) Any act that reduces the amount that may be allocated pursuant
to paragraph (1) constitutes a change in state taxes for the purpose
of increasing revenues within the meaning of Section 3 of Article
XIII A of the California Constitution and may be passed by not less
than two-thirds of all Members elected to each of the two houses of
the Legislature.
   (j) The film commission shall have the authority to allocate tax
credits in accordance with this section and in accordance with any
regulations prescribed pursuant to subdivision (e) upon adoption.
  SEC. 5.  This act provides for a tax levy within the meaning of
Article IV of the Constitution and shall go into immediate effect.
                                  
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