Maine House approves modest film-production reimbursement bump aimed at attracting shoots and jobs
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Summary
After a lengthy floor debate, the House passed LD 1957 to raise in-state wage reimbursement levels and add rural incentives for film and visual media production, capped at $1 million a year; supporters said it will grow jobs and keep creative talent in Maine, while opponents urged caution about singling out one industry.
The Maine House on March 25 approved LD 1957, a bill that raises reimbursement levels in the state's visual media production program and adds incentives to encourage shoots in rural counties. Sponsor testimony and floor debate focused on workforce development, tourism spillovers and the program's $1 million annual cap.
Representative Sayre (Kennebunk), who carried the majority report, framed the measure as a modest step to make Maine competitive. He said the bill increases reimbursements "to 25% of production wages" for qualifying in-state productions and includes higher percentages for projects in several rural counties, with safeguards including reporting requirements and reimbursement caps.
Opponents warned that the measure singles out one industry and asked whether state policy should favor a single sector while other businesses struggle under what one lawmaker called "high tax burdens." Representative Libby (Auburn) urged broader policy reform instead of industry-specific breaks.
Supporters argued the program has a strong multiplier effect. Representative Perkins (Dover-Foxcroft) cited examples of local spending and tourism benefits from past productions and said film shoots hire electricians, caterers and other local vendors, bringing money directly to Maine communities.
After extended debate and several members requesting roll calls, the House accepted the majority report as amended and ordered the bill passed and sent to the Senate for concurrence. The bill is capped at $1,000,000 per year and includes accountability provisions that sponsors said will direct spending into Maine wages and businesses.
The next step is Senate consideration; the House ordered the measure forwarded upon passage.
Sources: floor debate and motions on the House floor (see transcript segments where LD 1957 was presented and debated).
