Jason Koebler, writing for Motherboard: Statehouse employees in Minnesota say that lobbying efforts by big tech companies and John Deere are on the verge of killing right to repair legislation in the state that would have made it easier for consumers and small businesses to fix their electronics. According to two of the bill’s sponsors, the bill, which would have introduced “fair repair” requirements for manufacturers in the state, will not get a hearing that’s necessary to move the legislation forward. Minnesota Senate rules automatically kills any bills that do not have a hearing scheduled by a certain date (this year, it’s March 10). Last year, tech industry lobbying killed a similar bill in New York. “Unfortunately, it’s not going to make deadline this session,” Republican Sen. David Osmek, one of the sponsors, told me in an email. Osmek would not give additional specifics about his colleagues’ concerns with the bill, but a legislative assistant for the bill’s other sponsor told me that electronic manufacturer lobbying is likely to blame, while another source close to the legislature told me that tractor manufacturer John Deere — a long time enemy of fair repair — helped kill the bill as well.
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