Right to Repair Legislation Passes in Colorado

Right to Repair Legislation Passes in Colorado

Haylie Shipp
Haylie Shipp
For one state, it happened: right-to-repair legislation signed into law in Colorado.

WIth your Southeast Regional Ag News, I am Haylie Shipp. This is the Ag Information Network.

Colorado farmers will get the first opportunity to fix their own equipment next year, thanks to newly-approved right-to-repair legislation. Manufacturers will now be required to provide their customers with diagnostic software manuals and other aids. Colorado is the first U.S. state to approve this kind of law.

The “Consumer Right to Repair Agriculture Equipment Act” passed the Colorado Senate 46-14, while the state House passed the bill in February. The bill had bipartisan support as farmers’ profits were reportedly squeezed by expensive repairs and rapidly rising input prices. The legislation mandates that farm machinery manufacturers like Deere and CNH Industrial furnish their customers with diagnostic tools, software documents, and repair manuals beginning on January 1, 2024. Manufacturers must also provide those resources to independent technicians.

A Deere spokesman told Reuters that the company supports farmers’ right to repair but believes this bill wasn’t necessary and will carry unintended consequences.

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