The BFC has given itself until May 15 to complete its consultation.
Author: Geoffrey Macnab
Published: 07 May 2020
The British Film Commission is scrambling to have its Covid-19 Codes of Practice for film and TV production ready by the end of May.
This is the comprehensive document addressing everything from quarantining of foreign crew to catering and transport arrangements, coronavirus safety training, and social distancing rules as production in the UK looks to reboot after the lockdown.
The regulations will give what Adrian Wootton, chief executive of Film London and the British Film Commission, calls “very detailed, very granular production proposals covering on set, off set, and location filming.”
They will also provide international producers with very detailed advice on what they need to do to bring cast and crew into the UK.
“We are feeding into government with these proposals. We are having very detailed dialogue. What we are doing is hopefully getting the government to sign off on our protocols and proposals so that they’ll be endorsed by the Health and Safety Executive and by Public Health England,” Wootton said.
The BFC has given itself until May 15 to complete its consultation with industry and stakeholders including Pact, Bectu, the streamers, production companies, the studios, and some European partners. The aim then is to collate, sift, and review all the responses, to take government guidance, and to amend the guidelines accordingly.
“I’d like to think before the end of May will have a set of finalised, published proposals,” Wootton said. “We are moving at lightning speed. We have put these proposals together in just under three weeks. It’s a massive consultation exercise with health and safety officers, producers, line producers, you name it, the people who have been inputting into this. We think the proposals are robust but there are still sections which need elaborating.”
Wootton is promising that the regulations will be “as good as anything available in the world. Our intention is for [the regulations] to be absolutely the best standard we can possibly deliver so that people can have confidence and say, ‘OK, this gives me a road map for making stuff in the UK.’”
Adhering to the regulations is likely to add extra costs to productions. As yet, no announcements have been made about the recovery of these extra costs. It is conceivable, though, that public support measures may be put in place for covering some of the extra expenses.
Industry website Deadline published a draft version of the guidelines yesterday. Below are some of the recommendations.
Coronavirus training
On-set supervision and enforcement
Testing and health checks
Social distancing and mental health
Transport
Quarantining for foreign cast and crew
Cast and crew on-set
Catering
Workplace hygiene
Crowd scenes
Art department and set dressing
Costume department
Hair and makeup
Locations
This article originally appeared on our sister site ScreenDaily
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