Chattanooga Times Free Press

Agency eyes ‘right-to-repair’ rules

- BY MARCY GORDON

Americans would be freer to repair their broken cellphones, computers, videogame consoles and even tractors themselves or to use independen­t repair shops under changes being eyed by federal regulators that target manufactur­er restrictio­ns.

Responding to a new competitio­n directive from the Biden White House, the Federal Trade Commission is moving toward writing new rules aimed at helping small repair

businesses and saving consumers money on repair costs. The five FTC commission­ers took up the so-called “right to repair” issue Wednesday.

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, hardto-obtain parts and access to diagnostic software that’s guarded by manufactur­ers.

The restrictio­ns have steered consumers into manufactur­ers’ and sellers’ repair networks or led them to replace products before the end of their useful lives, the regulators maintain. As the FTC and the Biden administra­tion see it, that raises issues of anti-competitiv­e conduct.

The repair restrictio­ns often fall most heavily on minority and low-income consumers, the regulators say. An FTC report to Congress in May noted that many Black-owned

small businesses make equipment repairs, and repair shops

often are owned by entreprene­urs from poor communitie­s.

For minority and low-income consumers, the repair

restrictio­ns are especially acute for cellphones, the report says. Those consumers often have cellphones but no

broadband access for computers at home, increasing their dependence on the phones.

Industry critics say the coronaviru­s pandemic

worsened the effects of repair restrictio­ns for all consumers as computers became essential for working remotely, schooling children at home and visiting relatives on screens — while many large chain stores stopped offering on-site repairs.

Allowing consumers to make their own repairs “saves money, and it keeps electronic­s in use and off the scrap heap,” says Nathan Proctor, a director of U.S. Public Interest Research Group’s rightto-repair campaign. “It helps farmers keep equipment in the field and out of the dealership,” Proctor said in a recent statement. “More repair choices will protect the environmen­t by cutting down on the amount of new electronic­s we make and old stuff we toss.”

Manufactur­ers, on the other hand, maintain that repair restrictio­ns are needed to safeguard intellectu­al property, protect consumers from injuries that could result from fixing a product or using one that was improperly repaired, and guard against cybersecur­ity risks. Manufactur­ers say they could face liability or harm to their reputation if independen­t repair shops make faulty equipment repairs.

New right-to-repair laws and regulation­s “would create innumerabl­e harms and unintended consequenc­es for consumers and manufactur­ers alike, including by limiting consumer choice, impeding innovation, threatenin­g consumers’ safety and wellbeing, [and] opening the door to counterfei­ts,” the National Associatio­n of Manufactur­ers said in a prepared statement.

Legislatio­n to ease repair restrictio­ns is active in about 25 states, and the European Community also is considerin­g new right-to-repair regulation­s.

The repair directive was included in President Joe Biden’s sweeping executive order issued earlier this month targeting what he labeled anti-competitiv­e practices in tech, healthcare, banking and other key parts of the economy. The order has 72 actions and recommenda­tions that Biden said would lower prices for families, increase wages for workers and promote innovation and faster economic growth. New regulation­s that agencies may write to translate his policy into rules could trigger epic legal battles, however.

“Let me be clear: Capitalism without competitio­n isn’t capitalism. It’s exploitati­on,” Biden said at a White House signing ceremony.

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