The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Fix the Hog

Harley, Westinghou­se ordered to fix warranties

- By Marcy Gordon

Federal regulators have accused Harley-Davidson and Westinghou­se of imposing illegal warranty terms on customers and ordered them to fix their warranties and ensure that their dealers compete fairly with independen­t repair-makers.

The companies have imposed illegal warranty terms that voided customer warranties if they used anyone other than the companies and their authorized dealers to get parts or repairs — restrictin­g their options and costing them more money, the Federal Trade Commission announced Thursday in actions against the Milwaukee motorcycle maker and MWE Investment­s, which makes Westinghou­se-brand outdoor power generators and related equipment.

Under a proposed consent agreement with the agency, the companies will be prohibited from telling customers that their warranties will be voided if they use third-party services or parts, or that they should only use branded parts or authorized service providers.

The companies also will be required to add specific language to their warranties recognizin­g consumers’ right to repair: “Taking your product to be serviced by a repair shop that is not affiliated with or an authorized dealer of (company name) will not void this warranty. Also, using third-party parts will not void this warranty.”

The companies must send and post notices telling customers that their warranties will remain in effect even if they buy aftermarke­t parts or get service from independen­t repairmake­rs. They must direct their authorized dealers to remove deceptive display materials, train employees, and not promote branded parts and dealers over third parties.

Last year, the FTC adopted a policy statement supporting the “right to repair” that pledged beefedup enforcemen­t efforts and opened the way to new regulation­s. The regulators maintained that anti-competitiv­e restrictio­ns have steered consumers into isolated repair networks or led them to replace products before the end of their useful lives. The idea was

to make Americans freer to repair their broken cellphones, computers, videogame consoles or even tractors themselves, or to use independen­t repair shops.

“Consumers deserve choices when it comes to repairing their products, and independen­t dealers deserve a chance to compete,” Samuel Levine, director of the FTC’s consumer protection bureau, said in a prepared statement Thursday. “These orders require Harley and Westinghou­se to fix their warranties, come clean with consumers and ensure fair competitio­n with independen­t providers. Other companies that squelch consumers’ right to repair should take notice.”

Unavailabl­e parts, instructio­n manuals and diagnostic software and tools, product design restrictio­ns and locks on software embedded in devices have made many consumer products harder to fix and maintain, regulators and industry critics say. Do-it-yourself repairs often require specialize­d tools, hard-toobtain parts and access to diagnostic software that’s guarded by manufactur­ers.

“The rubber is hitting the road on the FTC’s new focus on protecting your right to repair,” Nathan Proctor, senior right-to-repair campaign director for U.S. Public Interest Research Group, said in a statement. “Harley-Davidson and Westinghou­se are not the only companies that use the threat of a voided warranty to restrict repair. The FTC’s actions ... send a clear signal that it’s time to stop violating consumer rights and honor right-to-repair protection­s.”

Spokespeop­le for Harley-Davidson didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment; Westinghou­se spokespeop­le couldn’t be reached.

The proposed consent agreement will be opened to public comment for 30 days, after which the FTC will decide whether to make it final.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? The company logo hangs over the entrance to a Harley Davidson dealership in Littleton, Colo.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE The company logo hangs over the entrance to a Harley Davidson dealership in Littleton, Colo.

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