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Visual effects, animation studios unite to convince Quebec for better tax deal

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MONTREAL – Visual effects and animation companies are uniting to strike a better deal with the Quebec government after it implemented tax changes that some firms say will cost them nearly two-thirds of their revenues next year.

Last spring, the provincial government added in the budget a 65 per cent cap on tax credits that international film studios can claim when they subcontract work to VFX and animation companies operating in Quebec. The original subsidy, which had no cap, was introduced in 1998, and the government says it has become too expensive.

The tax change entered into effect May 31, and as a result VFX and animation studios say the big film companies are less incentivized to put Quebec talent to work.

Véronique Tassart, director of mergers and acquisitions at Cinesite, said her company and other VFX and animation studios are making a joint set of proposals to the Quebec government in the next few months, before the next budget is tabled.

“We want to propose different solutions that would get the government the savings that they’re looking for without destroying the industry here in Quebec,” she said in a recent interview.

One idea, Tassart said, is to implement a rule requiring contracts between international studios and VFX and animation companies to require a minimum of 40-45 per cent of Quebec-based workers. This way, she says, the government is getting investment for its money.

Many companies already ensure about 65 per cent of labour on a contract comes from Quebec; but for some contracts, she said, the percentage of local labour is “much lower.”

Another possible proposal they will put forward, she said, is for Quebec to raise the cap so that the province remains competitive with Australia and France, where the tax environment is more favourable.

Already hard-hit by the Hollywood writers’ and actors’ strikes in 2023, Tassart says Cinesite was looking for a rebound — then the tax credit change came “as a bomb.”

Last spring, weeks after the government announced its plan, Cinesite lost three contracts accounting for one-third of its annual budget, she says. Cinesite, which had 600 Quebec-based employees in VFX and animation 2022, now has 400. More layoffs are looming, she said.

The government’s decision to review the tax credit was legitimate, Tassart says, but it was “too much and too fast.”

After surveying 28 different VFX and animation studios working in the province, the Quebec Film and Television Council found that they are expecting to lose an estimated 25 per cent of their revenue in 2024 and 63 per cent by 2025. The council says the industry generated revenues of $1.3 billion in Quebec last year, but in May, before the tax change kicked in, it said it expected that number to drop to $393 million by 2025.

The council says Montreal-based Digital Dimension closed its doors in May and two more studios are expected to close within the next six to 12 months. It expects four international studios working in the province will relocate work elsewhere. In 2022, Quebec employed 8,000 people in the visual effects and animation industry. Today, the council says the number of Quebecers employed has dwindled to 3,100, with more job losses to come.

Framestore, which produced all of the visual effects for “Barbie” at its Montreal office, is also trying to get concessions from the government. Chloé Grysole, a managing director with Framestore Canada, says the tax changes make it 10 per cent more expensive for film studios to produce visual effects in Quebec.

“We’re world leaders at the moment and the incentive always made it kind of a no-brainer to put work in Quebec. Now, with the incentives growing in France, in the U.K. and Australia, it’s more of a question mark than it used to be, and that’s problematic for us in the long run,” she said.

Quebec-born filmmaker Denis Villeneuve, the man behind Hollywood blockbusters like “Dune” and “Blade Runner 2049,” calls Quebec’s decision a “massive mistake.” In a recent interview with The Canadian Press, Villeneuve said film studios want to employ Quebec talent to make films, but all of that is now at risk.

The former tax credit structure, he said, was competitive with other countries. Without it, “we will lose thousands and thousands of jobs, and that was a lot of money that was coming back to the province.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 26, 2024.

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Serbia-Albania joint bid with political history set to win hosting of soccer’s Under-21 Euros

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NYON, Switzerland (AP) — Serbia and Albania are set to co-host the men’s Under-21 European Championship in 2027 in a soccer project that aims to overcome political tensions.

UEFA said Thursday only the Serbia-Albania bid met a deadline this week to file detailed tournament plans. Belgium and Turkey had declared interest earlier in the bidding process scheduled to be decided at a Dec. 16 meeting of the UEFA executive committee.

The Serbian and Albanian soccer federations teamed up in May to plan organization of the 16-team tournament played every two years that needs eight stadiums to host 31 games.

Albania soccer federation leader Armand Duka, who is a UEFA vice president, told The Associated Press in May that “it’s a 100% football project” with “a very good political message that we can get across.”

Weeks later at the men’s European Championship held in Germany, historic tensions between the Balkan countries — which in soccer included a notorious drone incident at a Serbia-Albania game in 2014 — played out at separate games involving their senior teams.

An Albania player was banned for games by UEFA for using a megaphone to join fans in nationalist chants, including targeting Serbia, after a Euro 2024 game against Croatia. Fans of Albania and Croatia earlier joined in anti-Serb chants, leading UEFA to impose fines for discrimination.

UEFA also fined both the Albanian and Serbian federations in separate incidents at Euro 2024 for fans displaying politically motivated banners about neighboring Kosovo.

After historic tensions were heightened by the 1990s Balkans conflicts, in 2008 majority ethnic Albanians in Kosovo declared independence for the former Serbian province. Serbia refuses to recognize that independence and considers Kosovo the cradle of its statehood.

An Albanian fans group daubed red paint on the federation offices in May when the cooperation with Serbian soccer for the Under-21 Euros was announced.

“We did have a few negative reactions from fans, mainly, and some interest groups,” Duka said then, “but not from the Albania government.”

UEFA has shown broad support for Serbia and Albania under its president, Aleksander Ceferin, who is from Slovenia.

The next annual congress of UEFA’s 55 national federations is in the Serbian capital Belgrade on April 3, and an executive committee meeting in September 2025 will be held in Tirana, Albania.

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AP soccer:

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S&P/TSX composite up more than 100 points, U.S. stocks also higher

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TORONTO – Canada’s main stock index was up more than 100 points in late-morning trading, helped by strength in the base metal sector, while U.S. stock markets were also higher.

The S&P/TSX composite index was 143.00 points at 24,048.88.

In New York, the Dow Jones industrial average was up 174.22 points at 42,088.97. The S&P 500 index was up 10.23 points at 5,732.49, while the Nasdaq composite was up 30.02 points at 18,112.23.

The Canadian dollar traded for 74.23 cents US compared with 74.28 cents US on Wednesday.

The November crude oil contract was down US$1.68 at US$68.01 per barrel and the November natural gas contract was down six cents at US$2.75 per mmBTU.

The December gold contract was up US$4.40 at US$2,689.10 an ounce and the December copper contract was up 13 cents at US$4.62 a pound.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 26, 2024.

Companies in this story: (TSX:GSPTSE, TSX:CADUSD)

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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New Brunswick election: Conservatives promise financial literacy curriculum

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FREDERICTON – The leader of New Brunswick’s Progressive Conservatives is promising to make financial literacy part of the school curriculum if his party wins the Oct. 21 election.

Blaine Higgs, who is seeking a third term in office as premier, said today he wants all students to enter adulthood with a better understanding of how money works.

The new curriculum would teach students about budgeting, bank accounts, interest rates, inflation, mortgages, leases, loans and RRSPs, among other things.

Meanwhile, Liberal Leader Susan Holt pledged that, if elected to govern, her party would overhaul the province’s approach to mental health and addiction care by adding community outreach workers to deliver frontline support.

She says these frontline workers would help school psychologists, which she said are in short supply.

Later in the day, Green Party Leader David Coon said a Green government would impose a 2.5 per cent rent cap as part of a broader plan to increase the supply of affordable housing.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 26, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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