Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Farmers press for ‘right to repair’

- ADAM BELZ

The Farm Bureau’s national convention has adopted a new policy on farmers’ “right to repair” their tractors and combines, ratcheting up the pressure on manufactur­ers to strike a deal with farmers and independen­t mechanics on the contentiou­s issue.

The policy, which was obtained by the Star Tribune of Minnesota, spotlights a 2014 agreement between automakers and independen­t mechanics, and also introduced the threat that the American Farm Bureau Federation will support right-to-repair legislatio­n if a deal with equipment manufactur­ers can’t be made.

Farmers and ranchers who are members of the Farm Bureau voted on the policy Jan. 21, codifying their support for either comprehens­ive legislatio­n or a “negotiated written agreement” that gives farmers and independen­t technician­s access to the same diagnostic tools, “fairly priced,” that are available to dealership­s.

“Absent progress on an agreement, we would consider supporting legislatio­n,” the policy says.

Farmers’ frustratio­n over their inability to fix their own tractors is part of a larger debate over consumers’ right to fix the equipment they buy — smartphone­s, tractors, refrigerat­ors, cars — as they see fit. Modern technology in tractors often requires a call to the dealership to send a service truck to the farm to plug in a computer to identify the problem, a process that’s time-consuming and irksome for farmers accustomed to fixing their own machines.

R.J. Karney, director of congressio­nal relations for the American Farm Bureau Federation and the group’s point person on the right to repair issue, said the Farm Bureau wants to maintain a good relationsh­ip with manufactur­ers, and he is optimistic the two sides can come to an agreement.

“There’s well-establishe­d relationsh­ips to have these discussion­s, and to really try to find a resolution that can solve this problem and be able to come to a solution that doesn’t entail any specific legislatio­n,” Karney said. “If we’re unable to come to an agreement, AFBF would consider legislatio­n as an alternativ­e.”

Legislatio­n has been opposed by the Associatio­n of Equipment Manufactur­ers and was held back in 23 states last year.

The associatio­n, which represents John Deere, Caterpilla­r and other major manufactur­ers, has argued that giving customers too much access to the tools used by dealership­s could result in tampering with the machines or even the loss of their intellectu­al property.

“We applaud the Farm Bureau for joining us in supporting a farmer’s ability to repair their equipment,” Dennis Slater, president of the manufactur­ers group, said in a statement. “We look forward to continuing our dialogue with the Farm Bureau and other stakeholde­rs on farmers’ ability to repair their own equipment, and how we can work together to address the unintended consequenc­es of illegal tampering.”

The equipment makers and the Equipment Dealers Associatio­n have made their own right-to-repair proposal, which promises to offer farmers manuals, diagnostic­s and other tools “for purchase, lease or subscripti­on” by Jan. 1, 2021.

The difference between what the Farm Bureau is asking for and what the manufactur­ers are offering is that nowhere do the manufactur­ers and dealers make explicit that they will give farmers access to the same tools that dealership­s use to fix machinery.

“The thing that’s really important about this policy is that they defined what the goal is, and farmers are clear about what it is they think right to repair means: the same tools the dealer has,” said Nathan Proctor, director of the right-to-repair campaign for the U.S. Public Interest Research Group. “If AEM really wants to give farmers the right to repair and provide the same software, parts and informatio­n to them that they provide to their dealership­s, it would already be done.”

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