Close X
Saturday, January 11, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Cuts Film Tax Credit 5 Per Cent After Consulting With Industry

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 May, 2016 01:37 PM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's finance minister has yelled cut on film and TV industry tax credits.
     
    Mike de Jong announced that the subsidy will be chopped by five per cent to 28 per cent after the government consulted with the industry.
     
     
    He says the subsidy was forecast to cost the government almost $500 million this year, up from the average of $313 million over the past three years, and the strong American dollar has made the province even more attractive to the industry.
     
    The changes are subject to approval of the legislature and are scheduled to be implemented in October when productions of new television episodes usually start.
     
    The film and TV industry brings in about $2 billion annually in productions.
     
    The Motion Picture Industry Association of BC says in a statement that the tax changes are a result of measured revisions that address the needs of the industry and government.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued Against Vancouver's Adam Ferreira In Random Stabbing At Eton Street

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued Against Vancouver's Adam Ferreira In Random Stabbing At Eton Street
    Ferreira is white, six feet tall and weighs 170 to 180 pounds. He has brown eyes, brown hair, and a tattoo of a dragon on his right upper arm.

    Canada-Wide Warrant Issued Against Vancouver's Adam Ferreira In Random Stabbing At Eton Street

    90-Year-Old Vernon, B.C., Man Wins $5 Million Lottery Prize

    90-Year-Old Vernon, B.C., Man Wins $5 Million Lottery Prize
    The 90-year-old says he was so excited about the win that he was only able to sleep for two hours before claiming his prize Thursday.

    90-Year-Old Vernon, B.C., Man Wins $5 Million Lottery Prize

    B.C. Prisoners Get Addiction Therapy After Settlement In Charter Challenge

    B.C. Prisoners Get Addiction Therapy After Settlement In Charter Challenge
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's corrections system has implemented a new policy to ensure prisoners with opiate addictions can access the same treatment as patients outside provincial jails.

    B.C. Prisoners Get Addiction Therapy After Settlement In Charter Challenge

    Premier Christy Clark Announces $23 Million Funding For Police And Prosecutors To Fight Gangs

    Premier Christy Clark Announces $23 Million Funding For Police And Prosecutors To Fight Gangs
    She says gangsters are just like cockroaches who will simply escape tough enforcement in one area and go elsewhere.

    Premier Christy Clark Announces $23 Million Funding For Police And Prosecutors To Fight Gangs

    Safe City Project Underway In Surrey

    Safe City Project Underway In Surrey
      Surrey RCMP is undertaking a project dubbed as Safe City, which aims to educate firearms owners on current laws surrounding the registration requirements for restricted and prohibited firearms.

    Safe City Project Underway In Surrey

    One Year Later: RCMP Continue To Investigate Murder-Suicide In Saskatchewan

    One Year Later: RCMP Continue To Investigate Murder-Suicide In Saskatchewan
    Police say the investigation into the deaths is almost complete, but the public won't be learning more about what happened.

    One Year Later: RCMP Continue To Investigate Murder-Suicide In Saskatchewan