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Arts, entertainment, business converge in attempt to secure Kansas film production incentives

Arts, entertainment, business converge in attempt to secure Kansas film production incentives

Yahoo10-02-2025
Stuart Little, a lobbyist for Grow Kansas Film, photographed in 2021. (Noah Taborda/Kansas Reflector)
TOPEKA — Film and television production professionals are hoping this is the year incentives become law so Kansas can attract talent to grow the local media industry.
Kansas is one of a small handful of states without incentives for film production, which industry professionals say is a missed opportunity for an economic boost.
A film production tax incentive bill made it through the 2024 legislative session, passing the House with a 102-22 vote and the Senate with a 32-5 vote, but it was caught in Gov. Laura Kelly's blanket veto of a package of tax break bills. The Legislature first considered an incentive bill in 2022.
This year, Senate Bill 52 has garnered support from the state's tourism and economic development groups, the state Department of Commerce and native Kansan film professionals.
'Kansas does not make it easy for its creative young people to stay here. We are unwilling to staunch the creative brain drain by actively telling our kids that it's better for them to move away,' said Kristin 'Kiki' Bush, an actor from rural Kansas, at a Feb. 4 hearing for the bill.
'Without incentives, they probably will,' she added.
The bill would create the Kansas Film and Digital Media Production Development Program within the Kansas Department of Commerce. It's based on a similar tax credit used in 40 other states, according to Stuart Little, a lobbyist for Grow Kansas Film, a coalition of film professionals.
'You come in and you spend money on a production in a state,' Little said. 'You do the qualified expenditures. You follow the rules. You get an audit. You get done. You can collect 30% of a tax credit.'
The program would offer up to $10 million in tax credits per year for eligible film, video or digital media companies, with the caveat that at least 10% of credits approved each year are Kansas-based production companies. Productions must meet certain criteria in order to receive a 30% production or post-production income tax credit.
The amount of tax credits can increase if a project is a multi-film deal, a television series, a big-budget production or if it contributes to Kansas' film production infrastructure or workforce. Credits can also increase if at least half of a production crew are Kansas residents or if a company has previously participated in the program.
Investments in production facilities at Wichita State University and Kansas State University-Salina and in a 50-acre underground film preservation and restoration facility in Hutchinson indicate a burgeoning film business, according to industry professionals advocating for the bill.
'This is in some ways an arts issue, an entertainment issue,' Little said. 'It's a business issue.'
For filmmakers, actors and investors supporting the bill, all the issues are one.
Bush, the actor, added: 'I believe our landscapes and our people's stories are worthy enough to compete with other states — that our stories are worthy enough to film.'
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