Report: Animation company got $49M in excessive tax credits

Report: Animation company got $49M in excessive tax credits

SeattlePI.com

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HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) — Blue Sky Studios, the company behind “Ice Age” and other animated films, received $49 million more in Connecticut state tax credits than it should have, state auditors said in a report released Wednesday.

The Disney-owned company, based in Greenwich, Connecticut, is set to close in April and lay off its more than 450 employees. Disney, which also owns animation powerhouses Walt Disney Animation Studios and Pixar Animation Studios, announced the closure in February, citing difficult economic conditions amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Connecticut auditors said Blue Sky received about $94.4 million in state film production tax credits from the 2017 through 2019 state fiscal years. Auditors said the company instead should have received state digital animation tax credits, which are capped at a total of $15 million per year for all companies combined. That resulted in the company receiving $49.4 million more than it should have, auditors said.

“The way they did this doesn’t appear to have followed the spirt of the law,” state Auditor John Geragosian said. “If the legislature had intended for them to be eligible for both tax credit programs, it would have been in the statutes.”

The economic development agency issued the $15 million in maximum annual tax credits under the digital animation program to Blue Sky during the 2016 fiscal year, then switched the credits for the company to the film production program beginning in the 2017 year, the report said.

Under the film production credits program, companies that incur more than $1 million in production expenses are eligible for a credit equal to 30% of such expenses.

The Department of Economic and Community Development, or DECD, disagrees with the auditors' findings, according to an agency response included in the auditors' report. An...

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