The Verge: The US Army is getting in on right-to-repair
The US Army is done relying on contractors to repair its equipment. Earlier this month, Army Secretary Daniel Driscoll committed to including right-to-repair provisions in all existing and future contracts with manufacturers, a change Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) told The Verge will "put an end to our dependence on giant defense contractors who charge billions of dollars and take months to repair critical equipment."
For now, only the Army has committed to securing right-to-repair provisions in contracts. But Warren is pushing for other military branches to adopt the requirement, addressing long-standing repairability problems across the armed forces. She's also hopeful that it could have a broader impact across industries and serve as a model for how other companies and organizations can advocate for similar repair-friendly provisions.
For years, reports have highlighted the US military's struggle to fix its own equipment, forcing it to wait on defense contractors to service them - even when stationed in foreign countries. A 2019 report from The New York Times described how a maintenance Marine in South Korea couldn’t repair a generator needed for training "because of the warranty," despite having tools to fix them.
The same report said that engines at a US military base in Okinawa, Japan, "were packed up and shipped back to contractors in the United States for repairs," while ProPublica found that the Navy’s contract with General Dynamics and Lockheed Martin forced the US military to fly contractors to the ship to make repairs on "proprietary" equipment, "adding millions in travel costs and often delaying missions."
...
Read the full article here.
By: Emma Roth
Source: The Verge
Next Article Previous Article