Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by martyb on Wednesday April 07 2021, @04:43PM   Printer-friendly

Colorado Denied Its Citizens the Right-to-Repair After Riveting Testimony:

Colorado’s proposed right-to-repair law was simple and clear. At 11 pages, the legislation spent most of its word count defining terms, but the gist was simple: It would let people fix their own stuff without needing to resort to the manufacturer and force said manufacturer to support people who want to fix stuff.

“For the purpose of providing services for digital electronic equipment sold or used in this state, an original equipment manufacturer shall, with fair and reasonable terms and cost, make available to an independent repair provider or owner of the manufacturer’s equipment any documentation, parts, embedded software, firmware, or tools that are intended for use with the digital electronic equipment, including updates to documentation, information, or embedded software,” the proposed bill said.

Right-to-repair is often spoken of in the context of broken phone screens, but it doesn’t just affect people’s personal devices. Agricultural and medical equipment are increasingly impossible to fix because manufacturers want to maintain a monopoly on repairing the product. These issues can make the right-to-repair literally life and death.

The Colorado House Business Affairs & Labor committee met to consider the law on March 25. Twelve legislators voted to indefinitely postpone considering the bill. Only one voted for it. “I still have a lot of questions. I still have a lot of concerns,” Rep. Monica Duran (D) said at the end of the committee hearing. She voted no on the bill.

[...] It was a stunning statement given just how many people testified on behalf of the right-to-repair legislation and how few questions the committee asked them.

Here's just the first of the many cases cited:

Kenny Maestas, who uses a wheelchair, drove this home in his testimony before the committee. Maestas spent a long time in the hospital and when he came home, his mobility was restricted. An electric wheelchair helped him get around, but it was broken. The right arm of the chair was broken and the battery would no longer hold a charge.

“Both my son and brothers were capable and ready to do whatever needed to get done...I called on the 14th of December,” he told the committee. “I was told the next time a tech would be in my area would be the 18th of January. As a rural resident of Colorado I’m used to a regional delay, but 35 days seemed excessive.”

Maestas said that the electric wheelchair company had the battery and spare parts on file to fix his chair, but the company’s procedure required a technician to first inspect the chair before making a repair. It was another 28 days after the tech first arrived before Maestas was mobile again. It was more than 60 days before his chair was working again.

“It’s never appropriate to make a human being with a critical care need wait over two months for a repair that could have been completed in two days,” he said. The committee asked Maestas no questions.

The story concludes:

[...] Bill sponsor Brianna Titone (D) told Motherboard she plans to keep fighting.

“I was particularly frustrated by a committee member who said they had ‘so many unanswered questions’ yet didn't ask any during the committee,” she said in an email.

[...] Connecticut, Delaware, Illinois, Maryland, Massachusetts, Missouri, Minnesota, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, Oregon, and Washington are also considering right-to-repair laws. Colorado’s fight is a preview for what to expect as legislators prepare to consider those bills.


Original Submission

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @07:50PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @07:50PM (#1134417)

    The problem there is that the politicians are already bought and paid for just to get their names on the ballot. The 'honest' ones will stay bought by their corporate masters and the 'dishonest' ones will accept your money and then act against you anyway. And if you try to run against them then you will need corporate sponsorship to get your voice heard by enough voters to challenge the incumbent.

  • (Score: 1) by anubi on Thursday April 08 2021, @11:11PM

    by anubi (2828) on Thursday April 08 2021, @11:11PM (#1135070) Journal

    I went on a rampage to vote out all incumbents after the DMCA was passed. ALL those congresscritters were in on it. For the first time, I became 100% disloyal to my party, as they showed me they were also 100% disloyal to me.

    For me, it was about forcing customer lock-in via technical enforcement, electronic surveillance, reporting my compliance (or lack of) to others, who now report my disobedience to law enforcement authorities who are authorized to use any physical or economic means to compel my compliance to their business model.

    The way I see it, once I purchase a thing, they now have what used to be my money. I no longer have any rights as to what they do with it, and I now have the thing; they no longer have any rights as to what I do with it either. Except replicate and sell copies.

    If I want to take my legally purchased thing apart, I claim the right to do so. And reassemble as I see fit.

    --
    "Prove all things; hold fast that which is good." [KJV: I Thessalonians 5:21]