Dayton Daily News

‘Right to repair’ fight extends from Apple goods to tractors

- By Adam Belz Star Tribune

The software in Peter Ripka’s $120,000 tractor gave him an error code and cut the engine to 50% capacity, and Ripka couldn’t figure out why. He was locked out.

The farmer near Ogilvie called the dealership to send someone with a computer to identify the problem. Three days and two service calls later, a simple matter of water in the diesel exhaust fluid tank was solved. None of the delay would have been necessary if Ripka had access to the diagnostic software.

“You should be able to bring your own computer out there with a cable and plug it in just like they do, and pull it up,” Ripka said. “But you can’t.”

Farmers’ simmering frustratio­n over their inability to repair their own equipment is now front

and center in a contentiou­s debate that spreads well beyond the farm. The battle is over who really controls a tractor, car, phone, refrigerat­or or camera, and whether customers have the freedom to repair the machines they own when they break, as they see fit.

New cars send owners to the dealership with a cryptic message when all they need is an oil change. An owner of an iPhone who tries to change the battery without Apple software gets a warning that sends them to the Apple Store. Nikon, starting in April, will only allow its cameras to be fixed at two specific locations in the U.S. Even Hasbro, the toymaker, has designed a Nerf dart blaster with sensors that prevent it from shooting cheaper aftermarke­t darts.

On one side of the debate is the “right-to-repair” move- ment. On the other side are manufactur­ers such as John Deere and Apple. Democratic presidenti­al candidates Eliz- abeth Warren and Bernie Sanders have weighed in, calling for federal “rightto-repair” legislatio­n, with Warren’s pitch specifical­ly aimed at farmers.

But so far the manufactur- ers are winning. Twenty-three states, including Minnesota, considered so-called “rightto-repair” legislatio­n in 2019. None of those states passed such a law.

New dynamic

Tightly controlled integrated technology is everywhere in modern life, and a prominent example is Apple products.

Steve Jobs unveiled a Macintosh personal computer in the early 1980s that required special tools to open, and included no external ports for programmer­s. The iPod, introduced in 2001, only played music purchased through Apple iTunes. Today, Apple meticulous­ly regulates who can repair an iPhone, though it has started to certify more independen­t repair shops in the past 12 months.

“The popularity of Apple, and their commitment to that idea, is certainly a factor, but there’s always been pressure from companies to tie in further purchases,” said Nathan Proctor, director of the “right-to-repair” campaign for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group.

For decades up to the 1980s, Proctor said, the manufactur­er-consumer rela- tionship was governed by a doctrine that manufac- turers had to “recoup their investment at the point of sale.” New technology has upended that.

“The addition of software has created an opportunit­y for manufactur­ers to change the rules of the game, and they have done so,” Proc- tor said.

Automakers tried to keep their diagnostic tools from independen­t mechanics, but relented in 2014 when trade groups representi­ng global auto companies signed a memorandum of understand­ing giving independen­t shops access to the diag- nostics authorized dealers use. That agreement was based on a Massachuse­tts law passed in 2012.

Still, the tools are pricey. They cost independen­t mechanics upward of $2,500 each, and the annual subscripti­on fees r un from $2,500 to $5,000 per man- ufacturer, said Wayne Watson, owner of Auto Works Diagnostic and Repair in Woodbury.

“If you’re a small inde- pendent shop working on all makes and models, it can add up quickly,” Watson said. “It’s not unusual for a shop to spend $50,000 a year on scan tools and subscripti­ons and updates.”

Aftermarke­t diagnos- tic tools can scan multi- ple makes and models, but they’re not as good as the tools used by dealers.

“The manufactur­ers are working very hard to get their cars back in the deal- ership,” Watson said.

Getting to the source code

The bill introduced in the Minnesota House of Representa­tives last year would require manufactur­ers to “make available, on fair and reasonable terms, docu- mentation, parts, and tools, inclusive of any updates to informatio­n or embedded software, to any independen­t repair provider or to the owner.”

The bill stalled in com- mittee in 2019, but could be revived this spring. The Minnesota Farmers Union supports the legislatio­n. The Minnesota Corn Growers Associatio­n and Minnesota Farm Bureau have not taken a position.

However, members of the Nebraska Farm Bureau — where farmers are gener- ally farther from dealership­s than they are in Minnesota — in December approved a change in policy that echoes the language in the Minne- sota bill, and the American Farm Bureau Federation is expected to address the issue at a meeting later this month.

Equipment manufactur- ers and dealers say there is no need for legislatio­n, since they agree farmers have the right to repair their equipment, and plan to make diagnostic tools, manuals and parts available to farmers by 2021, as outlined in a statement of principles pub- lished in 2018. That state- ment is modeled on the 2014 auto repair agreement, and explains that farmers, like independen­t auto mechan- ics, will have to pay extra for diagnostic tools and subscripti­on fees.

Matthew Larsgaard, the Fargo-based president of the Pioneer Equipment Dealers Associatio­n who testified against the legislatio­n in Min- nesota last spring, said that’s only fair. He also objects to language in the Minnesota bill that appears to require manufactur­ers to sell replacemen­t parts, diagnostic­s and other tools to farmers and independen­t mechanics at wholesale cost.

“Do you want the right to repair or do you want free stuff ?” Larsgaard said. “Because you have the right to repair. We’re providing you with the tools and informatio­n you need to perform repairs. What’s the real objec- tive here?”

The real objective of some “right-to-repair” proponents, said Larsgaard, is to get to the source code that oper- ates modern tractors, forcing manufactur­ers to turn over their intellectu­al property.

believe that is what this legislatio­n would compel manufactur­ers to do,” said Stephanie See, the director of state government relations for the Associatio­n of Equip- ment Manufactur­ers, which represents John Deere, Case IH, New Holland and Caterpilla­r, among others. She said some equipment manufactur­ers already provide farm- ers diagnostic tools.

Mike Peterson, a corn, soybean and hog farmer east of Northfield, said all trac- tors should be self-diagnos- ing. “This should be a moot point,” he said.

But they’re not, and paying for the “guaranteed con- tinual cost” of a diagnostic subscripti­on won’t make sense for a lot of farmers, Peterson said.

“A subscripti­on fee? Your tractor may only break down every so often,” he said.

The reality, Peterson said, is that manufactur­ers have built in what they hope is exclusive repair rights for their authorized dealers.

He guesses implement dealers fear mega-farms will hire in-house mechanics and abandon them. He’s sympatheti­c to that concern and wants local dealers to thrive.

“They’re our allies out here, but we can’t stand any more corporate monopolies eating into our bottom line,” Peterson said.

One person who’s tracking the debate is Gov. Tim Walz, former co-chair of the Congressio­nal Motorcycle Caucus and fixer of sliding van doors and car radios in his personal life.

“I do tend to try to repair my own stuff,” Walz said. “I had an old GMC vehicle. When I replaced the battery it took the code out of the radio, and the dealership­s didn’t want to give it to me.”

After some Googling he found the code and got the radio back, but the problem is a small example of what consumers are up against.

“I get some of the manufactur­ers’ concerns,” Walz said. “We don’t want unsafe vehicles on roads. We don’t want people bailey-rigging wires together on their breaks.”

But he’s sympatheti­c to farmers whose livelihood depends on their ability to fix their equipment, he said, and with the proliferat­ion of electronic­s in everyday life “there’s a discussion to be had,” Walz said. “I trust that we could maybe figure something out on the language.”

 ?? MATT MCKINNEY / MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE ?? Farmers are increasing­ly frustrated at the inability to fix their own equipment. Manufactur­ers want repairs made at dealership­s.
MATT MCKINNEY / MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE Farmers are increasing­ly frustrated at the inability to fix their own equipment. Manufactur­ers want repairs made at dealership­s.

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