Greene bill would give farmers right to repair equipment

A local lawmaker’s bill would require farm equipment manufacturers to allow Hoosiers the right to repair.

State Rep. Robb Greene, R-Shelbyville, has proposed authored House Bill 1155 to plow through certain requirements that agriculture equipment only be serviced and repaired by manufacturers.

The bill would require manufacturers in Indiana, like John Deere, to provide agriculture equipment owners and independent service providers the same service manuals and other materials used by official service providers, and the ability to purchase parts and tools needed for repairs. This would include software, hardware and technical equipment needed to run diagnostics and perform maintenance, a press release from his office says.

Currently, manufacturers can require any repairs to their farming equipment to be done through them, which can lead to higher repair costs and longer wait times for farmers. Proprietary software can also block owners from accessing or altering their equipment’s systems, the release says.

“The integration of software into more and more products has led some manufacturers to copy the business practices of Big Tech,” Greene said in a statement on the bill. “A $1 million combine is not a SaaS product, like Salesforce or Dropbox, nor a means of monthly recurring revenue. It’s the farmer’s property, hard stop. The issue at the heart of right to repair is ownership. When a manufacturer prevents a farmer from accessing any component of their property, that is not ownership, that is serfdom.”

If HB 1155 passes into law, the Indiana Attorney General could take action against those found in violation of the policy. Violators would also be subject to penalties applied to a deceptive consumer sales practice, the bill outlines.

The bill has been assigned to the House Agriculture and Rural Development Committee, of which Greene is a member. The bill doesn’t have a hearing date yet.

To watch a live stream of committee hearings and learn more about proposed legislation, visit iga.in.gov.