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Forty-four states and the District of Columbia have some form of tax credit program for production companies, and some offer credits as high as 35 to 40 percent. Companies qualify by meeting benchmarks for in-state hiring and spending. New Jersey is the only state considering ending its tax credit program for budgetary reasons, according to Vans Stevenson, senior vice president for state government affairs for the Motion Picture Association of America. Some states are expanding their programs, he said. Many of Wednesday's speakers described the ripple effect a television production can have. A scene on "Special Victims Unit" requires makeup artists, contractors, set designers and dressers, truck drivers, caterers and many others, said Tamara Tunie, who plays a medical examiner on the show. "It's one scene on one episode on one show, and there are hundreds of people working to make it happen," she said. "Special Victims Unit" has paid about $540 million in wages over 12 years to its cast and crew, not counting its featured stars, said producer Gail Barringer. The show also has paid about $150 million to New Jersey vendors over that time, she said. According to the MPAA, about 7,000 direct jobs were related to production in New Jersey in 2008, an increase of nearly 1,000 jobs from 2006. New Jersey vendors received about $507 million in business from production companies, compared to $387 million in 2007, the association said.
[Associated
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