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      <center>&nbsp;<img src="standard_times_logo.gif" alt="ST Logo"
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       <br>
       <big><b><br>
 Bill Would Give Mechanics Information &amp; Tools Available To Dealers</b></big><br>
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      <div style="text-align: center;"><span class="BYLINE"
 style="font-style: italic;">By ANIKA CLARK, Standard-Times staff writer 
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      <p><br>
       <br>
 NEW BEDFORD &#8212; Sam Giammalvo's Auto Sales, a 50-year-old business on Purchase 
Street, opened its doors at a time when mechanics could diagnose problems 
and fix cars without sophisticated computer technology.</p>
       
      <p>Decades ago, "you needed a good shop manual and tools," said Art 
Kinsman of the Boston-based Massachusetts Right to Repair Coalition. "Today 
you need literally millions of pages of information and all kinds of electronic 
tools to get the job done." Bay State lawmakers are weighing a bill that would
give independent shops like Giammalvo's the same access to this information 
as dealers affiliated with big-name manufacturers. The bill also would require 
diagnostic tools be made available to independent shops "at a reasonable and
nondiscriminatory price."<br>
 The so-called "right to repair" bill, one of several being considered by 
lawmakers, is expected to emerge today from the Joint Committee on Consumer 
Protection and Professional Licensure, where Rep. Robert M. Koczera, D-New 
Bedford, predicted it would win favor.</p>
       
      <p>"From what I've been told, the votes are there in committee," he 
said, adding that he, too, supports the bill. "A lot of people have their 
own mechanics," he said. "If those mechanics are capable enough to deal with 
the new electronics "&brvbar; they should be able to access whatever codes 
and information they need." As things stand, independent shops are blocked 
from certain repair jobs because they lack this access, according to Sam Giammalvo's
son, Mark Giammalvo, a city police officer who helps his father at the shop.
Sam Giammalvo's Auto Sales paid more than $6,000 for the generic scan tool
that mechanics use to determine the causes of various vehicle problems. Generic
scan tools used to work on cars from a wider range of manufacturers, Mark
Giammalvo said. But now, "you'll get this code that refers you to a dealer
scan tool. I don't have a dealer scan tool."</p>
       
      <p>This can force independent repair shops to refer their customers 
to dealers. "It's profit lost and, quite frankly, it's embarrassing," Giammalvo 
said. "The customer looks at you (like), 'What do you mean, you can't fix 
my car?'" This also can undermine competition, according to Rep. John F. Quinn,
D-Dartmouth, who supports the bill along with Rep. Antonio F.D. Cabral, D-New
Bedford.<br>
 Massachusetts Right to Repair Coalition coordinator Kinsman said he was
optimistic the bill would be successful this session, despite a similar bill's
death without a vote in the House after it was favorably reported out of
committee in 2008. Similar legislation is pending in the U.S. Congress.&nbsp;</p>
       
      <p>"The more people know about this, the more they realize it's fair 
for consumers, it's fair for small businessmen," Kinsman said. Still, "there 
are powerful players on the other side from the auto industry who want to 
see this bill killed."</p>
       
      <p>Robert O'Koniewski is the executive vice president of the Massachusetts 
State Automobile Dealers Association. "We've strongly opposed it," he said, 
in part because dealers are required to meet capital investment, facility 
and training requirements to secure their franchise status. "To draft a law 
to try to put independent repair shops on the same footing as dealers, we 
have issues with," he said. At the Association of International Automobile 
Manufacturers, "We think legislation is unnecessary because we know that that
information is already available to anyone who wants to access it," Director
of Government Affairs Paul Ryan said.</p>
       
      <p>The National Automotive Service Task Force Web site provides temporary 
access to service information for a user fee. Ford, for example, charges $22
for 72 hours, $325 for a month and $2,700 for one year. &nbsp;"Everything 
that is available to a franchise dealer is available to the independents" 
online, Ryan said. But Kinsman said, "In some cases, they're kind of getting 
the CliffsNotes version of things."</p>
       
      <p>And even when independent mechanics purchase temporary access to 
information, these guides can still refer them to a dealer scan tool, according 
to Mark Giammalvo.<br>
 Regardless, Jim Lutz &#8212; a dealer at Alden Buick GMC Truck in Fairhaven and 
Alden Volkswagen Fairhaven &#8212; argued that independent shops are faring just 
fine.<br>
 Independent shops, he said, "have the bulk of the business already."<br>
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