via NEWSgrist:
NYC Film Permits? Independent Filmmakers et al. Fight Back
Marshall Reese (of ligorno/reese) writes in that he and Svetlana
Mintcheva of the National Coalition Against Censorship (NCAC) have been
crafting a letter in response to the regulations under consideration by
the Mayor's Office.
Click here to read the City's proposed rules (PDF)
Click here to read the NYCLU's comments (PDF)
via ligorno/reese email:
[...] there are a number of individuals and organizations, (the New York Civil Liberties Union for one), who are also suggesting appropriate actions. The initial regulations proposed by the Mayor's Office seem unrealistic, hard to enforce, and potentially stifling to filmmakers and photographers in New York, as well as to have serious, negative, first amendment consequences.
[...] download the letter at:
http://ncac.org/NYCfilmphotore
strictions.pdf If you agree and would like to sign it, please contact Svetlana
Mintcheva at NCAC.Please include your name, professional affiliation and city of
residence to be added to the letter. We will send the letter out by
end of this week, July 27, 2007. The deadline for comments by the
Mayor's Office is August 3rd and we want to send the letter to them
before that.We feel that the more options that the Mayor's office receives, the
better the likelihood they will make a decent decision.Thanks for your time. & please feel free to circulate the letter.
Sincerely,
Marshall Reese
Ms. Julianne Cho
Assistant Commissioner
Mayor’s Office of Film, Theatre & Broadcasting
1697 Broadway
New York, N.Y. 10019July 27, 2007
Re: Chapter 9, Title 43 of the City Rules of New York Film Permits
Dear Ms. Cho:
We are writing to you to express our concern about the adverse impact the new rules on Film Permits (Chapter 9, Title 43 of the City Rules of New York), currently under consideration, will have on independent filmmakers, photographers and film and photography students in the City. While we understand and appreciate the need for written guidelines regarding photographic and film making activities in New York – especially when large film crews are involved - we are concerned that Sections 901(b)(1)(ii) and (iii) would impose unnecessary, yet significant burdens upon small, one-camera professional filmmaking and photography enterprises. Those sections require that a permit must be acquired for filming with a hand-held camera when it lasts more than 30 minutes (including setup) in a single location and involves two or more people, as well as for filming with a single tripod when it lasts more than 10 minutes (including setup) and involves five or more people.Independent filmmakers and photographers, whether students or professionals,
frequently work on extremely small budgets and with minimal equipment. Very often, they work only with hand-held cameras or tripods (and with portable sound-recording devices if interviewing individuals on the street). This equipment certainly is not of the kind that would create safety hazards, tie up traffic or otherwise disrupt the free flow of activity on City streets, presumably the underlying concerns the City had in formulating the rules.Yet, despite this non-intrusive filming process, under the new rules filmmakers would be required to obtain permits were they to film with a hand-held camera for more than 30 minutes within a 100 foot radius of any given location, or for more than 10 minutes with a stationary camera within the same radius. The conditions placed on the number of people “interacting” would preclude even the filming of a small documentary where a cameraman, sound person and producer are interviewing a couple visiting, say, Ground Zero. These rules virtually ensure that no filmmaker or professional photographer would henceforth be able to work without going through the permission and insurance process.
The 10 and 30 minute time limitations would present an unrealistic time frame for most documentary filming and professional photography. In fact, some common film/video techniques, used by amateurs as well as professionals, such as time-lapse photography, inherently require both a tripod and longer periods of time. The new restrictions effectively eliminate time-lapse as an option unless a permit and insurance are obtained in advance.
Worse, even were the filmmakers do go through the process of obtaining a permit, the requirement that “[p]ermittees shall confine their activities to the locations and times specified on their permit” places an insurmountable burden upon the work of documentary filmmakers for whom spontaneity and a quick
reaction to urban life is a key. Seminal work like Helen Levitt, Janice Loeb and James Agee’s In The Street, a portrait of late 1940’s Harlem street life, would be among the kind of work unfairly burdened under the new restrictions. In a more recent example, many of independent filmmaker Jem Cohen’s films (f. eg. This Is A History Of New York (1987), NYC Weights And Measures (2006)) could not possibly have been made if the filmmaker had to get permits in advance or restrict the time he stood in a given place as they were predicated on spontaneous shooting on the street over a long period of time, both with and without a tripod, often done with a crew of 2 to 3 people.Finally, the requirement of a $1 million liability policy for low-budget filmmakers and photographers, whose work entails virtually no disruption or compromise of City life or safety, is disproportionate and unduly burdensome for the artists.
There is simply no justifiable safety or congestion rationale for the City to apply its permit requirements to two or more individuals based solely on their use of hand-held cameras or tripods in a single area for more than 10 or 30 minutes. To the extent that these rules encompass an entire class of independent documentary filmmakers and professional photographers, they create an unintended, but no less unfortunate, intrusion into First Amendment protection of artistic expression.
Not only do the new rules have a potentially chilling impact on artistic freedom, but by discouraging small productions and student filmmakers from using New York as a site they could also have a negative economic and cultural impact: small productions help support the City’s many labs, equipment rental
companies, postproduction facilities, and festivals, whereas its film and art schools draw talented students and professors from around the world. Yet students, to an even greater extent than professional filmmakers and photographers, cannot afford the insurance and rarely plan ahead in the way the
regulations require.For the above reasons, we are calling for the elimination of rule 901(b)(1)(ii) and (iii) restricting the use of hand-held or tripod-mounted cameras without a permit, as well as the elimination of the language of rule 901(b)(2)(i) and (ii) beginning with “provided that such activity. . .” Additionally, we propose that the $1 million insurance requirement for photographers and documentary filmmakers who use only hand-held or tripod-mounted cameras be eliminated.
We hope that the MOFTB will give these suggestions its utmost consideration in light of the serious issues raised above.
You may also download the letter via newsgrist:
nycfilmphotorestrictions_1.pdf .pdf
Comments