Equipment manufacturers say the bill is a solution in search of a problem, while Farmers Union supports bill.
While speaking recently before the White House Competition Councill, President Joe Biden continued his call for “right to repair” and explained if you own a product, from a smartphone to a tractor, you don't have the freedom to choose how or where to repair that item you purchased.
“Denying the right to repair raises prices for consumers, means independent repair shops can’t compete for your business,” Biden explains. An executive order issued last year on competitiveness by the Biden administration supported the “right to repair” and voluntary actions followed.
Following the order’s support for the right to repair, the Federal Trade Commission unanimously announced that it would ramp up enforcement against illegal repair restrictions. Since then, large firms have voluntarily announced changes to their policies to make it easier for consumers to repair their own electronics.
Now, Sen. Jon Tester, D-Mont., wants legislative action to address the situation. His Agriculture Right to Repair Act will guarantee farmers the right to repair their own equipment and end current restrictions on the repair market.
“I’ve been a farmer my whole life, and I’ve seen the unfair practices of equipment manufacturers make it harder and harder for folks to work on their tractors themselves—forcing them to go to an authorized mechanic and pay an arm and a leg for necessary repairs,” says Tester. “Manufacturers have prevented producers from fixing their own machines in order to bolster corporate profits, and they’ve done it at the expense of family farmers and ranchers, who work hard every day to harvest the food that feeds families across the country.
“Farmers operate in tight windows and on tight margins, and they simply can’t afford to waste time or money bringing their equipment to dealer authorized mechanics in the middle of a season. They need to be able to repair their own equipment, and this legislation will secure them that right,” Tester continues.
With advanced technology now being incorporated into production agriculture, it has become more and more difficult for farmers and ranchers to fix their own equipment, hurting the bottom lines of both producers and local non dealer-certified repair shops, according to a statement from Tester’s office. His legislation will combat the issue of right to repair by requiring original equipment manufacturers to make it easier for farmers to make these repairs and continue doing business in rural America.
While some farmer and consumer groups support the bill, Kip Eideberg, Association of Equipment Manufacturers senior vice president of government and industry relations, says Tester’s bill is a “solution in search of a problem.”
Right to repair bill requirements
Tester’s legislation tackles consolidation in the repair market specifically by requiring equipment manufacturers to:
- Make available any documentation, part, software, or tool required to diagnose, maintain or repair their equipment.
- Provide means to disable and re-enable an electronic security lock or other security-related function to effect diagnostics, repair or maintenance.
- Permit third-party software to provide interoperability with other parts/tools, and to protect both the farmer’s data and equipment from hackers.
- Ensure that when a manufacturer no longer produces documentation, parts, software or tools for its equipment that the relevant copyrights and patents are placed in the public domain.
- Ensure parts are replaceable using commonly available tools without causing damage to the equipment or provide specialized tools to owners or independent providers on fair and reasonable terms.
- Return data ownership to farmers. Tester claims manufacturers currently collect and sell all the data generated by farmers, and this data is the farmers’ “secret sauce” for how they conduct their business.