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Government Transportation United States

Texas Lawmakers Want To Stop Tesla From Fixing Its Own Cars (electrek.co) 255

In Texas the local car dealer lobby has blocked Tesla from selling its cars directly to customers. They're using old laws meant to prevent car manufacturers from competing with their own local dealers -- but Tesla never had any local dealers!

And according to Electrek, it gets worse... Despite this issue, Texans have bought thousands of Tesla vehicles, which the automaker delivers from other states to comply with the law. Tesla has been able to service those vehicles through its own service centers, which are not subject to those same direct-sale rules, but now dealers are even going after Tesla's right to service its cars.
Quartz offers some additional coverage: At issue is a battle over money. Car dealers derive much of their revenue from selling and (especially) servicing vehicles. Tesla's direct-to-customer sales and service stations are a threat to that business model since they cut dealers out of the transaction.
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Texas Lawmakers Want To Stop Tesla From Fixing Its Own Cars

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  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @03:38PM (#58288960)

    The state which prides itself on getting big government out people lives until the people need the power of big government to kill competition.

    • by TomR teh Pirate ( 1554037 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @03:48PM (#58289000)
      And it's not just that the legislature of big oil is trying to pick the automotive winner, but they are doing it on the backs of Texans' rights to choose for themselves what car they can buy.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Itâ(TM)s not big oil. Thereâ(TM)s plenty of uses of oil and plenty of demand elsewhere for their product to not worry about the the threat from Tesla to theTexas auto market. Especially since they donâ(TM)t offer a truck.

        No this is all big dealerships pushing this. If they sold electric cars, theyâ(TM)d still be pushing this as they are an entrenched interest trying to use regulators to force a competitor out of the market.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I figure this would be the kind of thing that Democrats would like since it forces automakers to pay out more money to workers. Car makers can't provide certain firmware updates over the air in most states because it's considered repair work. So what happens instead is they have to pay a dealership to manually install the update, thus giving a mechanic more work. Classic example of featherbedding, which unions also love forcing on businesses, in order to slow things down so that people have to pay more so t

    • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @04:55PM (#58289238)

      The state which prides itself on getting big government out people lives until the people need the power of big government to kill competition.

      Let me explain: Big government doing something I don’t like or stopping me from doing something: Big government bad; doing something that benefits me or stops someone else from doing something I disapprove of: Big government good

      • by dryeo ( 100693 )

        It's not even big government as a small government can still stop you from doing something.

        • You don't understand what the term "big government" means in the context of the USA. It isn't specifically referring to size, and it typically only refers to the federal government. People have less of an issue with government overreach at the state and municipal levels since you can always move cities or states; moving to another country is a lot harder.

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Well here it is the government of Texas that is being talked about and I haven't noticed any suggestions of just moving to a different State.
            Politicians are always going to be open to being corrupted, which is the actual problem, and moving can only help so much as they'll be politicians wherever you move. At least with democracy you can change governments when they get too full of shit, which always seems to happen.

            • Given that unless you have really unusual circumstances you're probably buying a car from a dealer no more often than once every two years, and that worst case you could buy your car from out of state to avoid giving money to the local dealers, I'd say that moving out isn't the right option.

              Writing your state representatives to urge them to remove the liberal union-supporting anti-freedom laws(remember, Texas lawmakers, gotta hit their hot buttons) along with a generous donation to their campaign funds(beca

          • While this is true, a fair number of people are also uncomfortable with state powers since currently we see 2 manifestations where it goes beyond state borders

            1) State economic power leading to defacto regional or even national standards. California is a great example of this. Ostensibly, they set their own emissions standards, and their own standards for textbooks. But in practices, their rules cover the bulk of the market, so many simply adhere to those rules universally, effectively making them the rules

            • I'm not a fan of government overreach at any level, let alone this kind of blatant pandering to special interests. Just pointing out that he's misunderstanding the term.

            • Ostensibly, they set their own emissions standards, and their own standards for textbooks. But in practices, their rules cover the bulk of the market, so many simply adhere to those rules universally, effectively making them the rules/standards for everyone else

              "California Emissions" became the standard when several other states passed laws to follow California's standards. It was not market forces that caused car manufacturers to "default" to California emissions, it took legislation in several states to make that happen.

              Before those laws passed, CA was the outlier where people had to pay several hundred extra for their cars to get the "California Emissions" package.

              Textbooks are also not dominated by California because each district in CA buys its own books. W

        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          The epitomy of small government, MONARCHY, so how does everyone feel about a government of '1', that owns everyone else and well, if you disagree, the would publicly torture your to death.

          Democratic Government is meant to be absolutely huge it should include everyone. The bullshit about small government, people can believe any kind of anti-themselves, lets all forget the logic of a government of the people, by the people and for the people, ohh no they want small government, the government of the few, by t

          • by dryeo ( 100693 )

            Some believe the benevolent dictator is the best form of government and sometimes it does work well, but there is alway the succession problem.
            As for democracy having everyone involved, most people just don't have time to be informed about everything and are just as likely to be mis-informed.

    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @04:59PM (#58289248)
      The same type of laws are present in all 50 states [mercatus.org]. Most of the states have had those laws for 50+ years, with a few going back 100 years. A few stragglers joined in the last 30 years, with Texas being the last one. So those accusing Texas of doing this because of some anti-Tesla agenda should read up on history, and look into their own states' laws before throwing stones. It'll be a helluva lot more productive towards repealing these laws or updating them to reflect how cars are purchased and repaired in the 21st century.
      • by Uberbah ( 647458 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @07:19PM (#58289778)

        The same type of laws are present in all 50 states.

        And how many states are enforcing those laws against Tesla? That's the only thing relevant here, and Texas is the only state making noises about blocking not just sales, but repairs.

      • by Aighearach ( 97333 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @11:34PM (#58290634)

        That's a complete horse-shit article.

        It just waves its hands saying all the states have these laws. My state doesn't. It doesn't explain that in any way.

        The reason it is obviously blatant lies is that it gives a category for what laws it is talking about, but then doesn't define who is included in the category. So any state with any law that says anything about that category of situations is included.

        It would seem from the wording they use that Tesla wouldn't be allowed to run their own dealships; except that there aren't any details that would let you judge that. And of course that's because they're simply using misleading wording to trick you. To trick you. Not to trick me; I knew they didn't give me details, simply because I didn't find any details. And I don't put any value in their conclusions, only in their arguments. And they didn't make any.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward

      The state which prides itself on getting big government out people lives until the people need the power of big government to kill competition.

      Has the GOP been consistent in any way between (a) what is says, and (b) what laws it passes when elected? At least when it comes to economic issues? Seems to me they talk to 'grassroots' folks, but walk to the plutocrats once in.

      Perhaps they're more consistent with regards to social issues? Though the Right has the religious folks who think drugs are bad, and also tend to have many laissez-faire / libertarian folks who thing "let people do whatever"--so the tent is a bit confused in that regard.

      • Perhaps they're more consistent with regards to social issues?

        Not at all. You need to keep giving reasons for those people to show up at the polls.

    • Just like all government, ours here in Texas is corrupt. It has absolutely nothing to do with the people, it's only money that has a voice in our state capital. Just like every other state in our failing democracy. Look at history and you'll see our future. It just a matter of time and we are definitely on the downward slope.
    • Most of the members of the auto dealer association aren't even local themselves. It's pay to win government at its finest.

  • I really like the thought of not having to take a car in for service, that someone can just come out and repair it.

    One thing I've wondered is how the fix some things without a real lift - like if they need to replace some parts of the suspension. Seems like they would still have to take it to a real shop for some more advanced repairs.

    Since an electric car is generally simpler. I had been wondering what kinds of repairs people were even calling in...

    • My car mechanic (Score:5, Interesting)

      by DogDude ( 805747 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @04:09PM (#58289052)
      My mechanic is planning on specializing in vintage cars as the electrics start happening. He expects it'll be a pretty quick switch. He says that there will be very little to fix outside of suspensions, and occasionally brakes. Even brakes won't need as much fixing, because electric cars will probably all use regenerative braking. Electric motors, of course, last a very, very, very long time, and generally, they're so cheap that it makes more sense to replace a motor than taking the time to re-wind the coils.
      • Re: My car mechanic (Score:2, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        It will be exciting seeing old vintage cars being brought back to life by converting them to electric. There is a business here and it is already happening in Europe.

      • Re:My car mechanic (Score:4, Insightful)

        by SvnLyrBrto ( 62138 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @05:53PM (#58289454)

        I don't see the switch being all *that* quick. The big blocker for Tesla, I think, is still charging. I would likely have bought a Tesla already... If I already owned my own house and could have the home charger installed. But alas, I rent right now. Driving to the nearest supercharger every time I need a juice up is in no way practical. And I suspect that there are a great many people who are in a similar situation.

        Now, buying a home is on my near-to-mid-term horizon. But then there's the problem that I will *just* have bought a HOUSE. And dropping another $50-100K on a car would be significantly less reasonable... at least until 2021, at the earliest, when 45 could be expunged from the White House and the mortgage and itemized tax deductions, which he gutted, could be restored.

        Now... If Tesla were, instead of just superchargers which really only solve the "road trip" problem, to buy one of the major gas station brands and convert it to superchargers chain-wide... I think *THAT* will be the watershed moment that will cause the quick switch of the general masses to electric.

        • at least until 2021, at the earliest, when 45 could be expunged from the White House and the mortgage and itemized tax deductions, which he gutted, could be restored.

          I wouldn't hold my breath waiting for that to happen - after collecting increased federal taxes from high-tax California, New York, New Jersey and other states, federal lawmakers will drag their feet to give up that revenue stream.

          Besides, I think the earliest it could happen would be 2025, but that's a different story.

          You know, assuming this issue is as reviled as you believe it is, it could be repealed by veto-proof majorities in the House and Senate.

        • by DogDude ( 805747 )
          I think we'll see all sorts of rental properties having to add charging to stay competitive. It's. One time construction cost, and it's an asset. I think build out will be pretty quick. One day, it'll just be a required part of any commercial or residential driveway construction. My guess is 2025ish. I'm seeing more Leafs and Teslas every day.
        • Now... If Tesla were, instead of just superchargers which really only solve the "road trip" problem, to buy one of the major gas station brands and convert it to superchargers chain-wide... I think *THAT* will be the watershed moment that will cause the quick switch of the general masses to electric.

          Far more likely is that rental properties will install chargers. First as a way to attract higher-paid customers, then eventually it will become a norm to have it, as much as it is a norm to provide parking.

          The chargers aren't a whole lot of money (like $1-2k for an outdoor unit), and the installation is very basic electrical work as long as there is an easy route to run the power.

          As for places without parking, well first the garages where you can rent parking will get chargers, probably at a faster rate t

      • they're so cheap that it makes more sense to replace a motor than taking the time to re-wind the coils.

        I'm not sure that you could practically rewind the coils in a Tesla motor anyways. It's my understanding that while it is physically a standard AC induction motor, it is a very optimized and specialized induction motor.

        It'd be like rebuilding an engine and because you can't match factory specs exactly enough you end up with an engine with no more power, but 1/3rd higher fuel usage.

        And the coils are unlikely to go bad as well - you're more likely to see issues with the electronics or even shaft if you manag

      • For a long, lone time now, the biggest problem with cars has been electrical and computer failure, not mechanical failure. Somehow, I don't think electric cars will make that better.

        Ask any modern mechanic, and they'll tell you it's impossible to survive as a mechanic without spending thousands of dollars on scan tools. Hell, I just watched a YouTube video showing that you can't replace the rear brake pads on a certain VW unless you use a scan tool to put the car into diagnostic mode. It's not a job you

        • by DogDude ( 805747 )
          They can scan, but they still don't fix electronic parts. I've never heard of a mechanic fixing a circuit board. They replace them. On electric cars, I think they'll continue to do so.
    • One thing I've wondered is how the fix some things without a real lift - like if they need to replace some parts of the suspension. Seems like they would still have to take it to a real shop for some more advanced repairs.

      Nope. Thousands of people do these repairs on their own cars in their garage or driveway. They use jacks, chain hoists, and ramps (depending on the repair). Lifting an entire car 7-feet in the air is a convenience, not a necessity.

      • by shilly ( 142940 )

        My parent's garage in the UK has a 7 foot hole dug in the floor with planks over it, to enable repairs for cars. It was there when they bought the house, 45 years ago.

  • All or nothing (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Did they already get John Deere to open up their software?

  • One: Build the damned wall at the Oklahoma and New Mexico borders. Two: Just let 'em secede.

  • So when them congresspeople successfully block Tesla from servicing its own cars... do they happen to know how to fix the cars themselves?
    • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

      by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @05:31PM (#58289362)
      Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • The car dealers that are behind these efforts want to force Tesla to set up dealerships, owned by the existing dealers.

      First, they want a cut from sales, and the high-profit service work.

      Second, they want to prevent other car manufacturers from seeing Tesla keeping that cut and making that profit. GM would make a lot more money if dealers weren't skimming every sale and keeping most of the profit from service.

  • Tea for Texas (Score:4, Interesting)

    by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @05:07PM (#58289284) Journal

    Forget Chicago, New York, California. The state of Texas has by far the most corrupt politicians in the nation. From the governor on down to local sheriffs, they all have their hands out to someone who's only happy to put a little something in it.

    This came as a surprise to me when lived in South Texas. Texans love to talk about their love of freedom and hatred for big government and regulation, but it turned out to be the exact opposite. This is a real shame, because the people of Texas, the actual citizens, are some of the nicest, most decent people you could meet. But decades of unabashed corruption and gerrymandering have completely destroyed anything like true representation. Only recently has this been changing a little bit, because the energy industry in Texas is slowly losing it's mojo.

    They've covered in up using Koch Brothers money and energy industry wealth, but if you look closely, you quickly learn that Texas state politicians are so corrupt it would make a Chicago alderman blush.

    • You have obviously never lived in Louisiana.
    • Re:Tea for Texas (Score:5, Informative)

      by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Sunday March 17, 2019 @06:15PM (#58289552)
      I was kind of curious so I did some quick Google searches. There was one article based on a report about which states are most susceptible to corruption [qz.com]. The top state was curiously enough North Dakota which apparently is due to the fact that they have few laws or regulations in place designed to prevent it. Texas was 1 of 16 states with a passing grade in that report.

      Another article discussed the results of a study that looked at convictions for federal anti-corruption laws [mic.com] to establish rankings. Here the most corrupt state was Mississippi. I had to click through to the study since Texas wasn't in either the top or bottom 10, but it's listed as the 18th least corrupt state in the rankings.

      One article that did report Texas as corrupt (it only came in 15th) was one which cited a report that looked at laws in systems each state has in place to prevent or curtail corruption [cheatsheet.com]. In this case the worst rated state was Wyoming.

      FiveThirtyEight also has their own article from a few years back [fivethirtyeight.com] that delves into the topic. Texas does have a lot of corruption convictions, but on a per capita basis, it's in the top third. In this assessment, Louisiana is the most corrupt based on convictions per capita, Kentucky had the worst reporter rating, and Georgia is indicated in having the greatest lack of laws to prevent corruption. Oregon, Massachusetts, and New Jersey are respectively the least corrupt states based on those same categories.

      In conclusion, you can apparently measure corruption in several ways and get a variety of results. Texas seems to be pretty middle of the pack in an overall sense.
      • Convictions for corruption are probably the worst metric to use to measure if a state is corrupt of not. It assumes that the corruption somehow stops at the court system. I assure you, it does not. Judges in Texas are famously corrupt.

        https://www.statesman.com/news... [statesman.com]

        http://lawflog.com/?p=1957 [lawflog.com]

        https://www.texasobserver.org/... [texasobserver.org]

      • 1. It would seem to me that logically, the more corrupt a state become the more anti-corruption laws it will have. If the leaders are all honest, no one is going to write laws, at least not anymore than it generally being illegal to be corrupt.
        2. The more people convicted for corruption, the less corrupt a government is. It is surprisingly easy to be accidentally corrupt. Their will always be people to arrest and punish for corruption. It is only serious government breaking corruption when people stop getti

        • It would seem to me that logically, the more corrupt a state become the more anti-corruption laws it will have.

          Why would corrupt politicians make laws to block their own corruption?

      • Not surprised to see Idaho so high on the list, they're basically owned by mining interests... I'd like to see a more granular breakdown. I was about to say that Texas is too big and too diverse to be dominated by a single industry like that, but that's not true for west Texas. West Texas is almost a mono culture, ripe for manipulation. That's also where most of the oil is.

        I wonder how well my little theory lines up with reality. In principle, west Texas should be considerably more "susceptible to corrup
  • There is not much of money in servicing the electric cars. Brake, suspension, collision repairs... Tesla should simply out source all its servicing to national chains like NTB or Pep Boys. It will save itself from the service hell. After manufacturing hell and delivery hell, it is approaching service hell.
  • A law like this may also affect Right to Repair and knock down makers of farm and construction equipment like Caterpillar and John Deere who have been trying to hold a monopoly on servicing their own brands of equipment.
  • It may or may not be Tesla, but plug-in electric vehicles are the future of transportation, and fighting against it is pointless.
  • but now dealers are even going after Tesla's right to service its cars.

    what about the customer right to get their car serviced through someone of their choosing? i thought capitalist america was ostensibly all about customer choice?

  • Where are the laws that would protect the consumer from local car dealerships and repair shops.

    I actually would prefer that when I need service, the car company can come and pickup my car and replace it with a loaner and ship it back to the factory to be properly refurbished... not simply repaired.

    Consider if Tesla were to build an assembly line that could disassemble 80% of the vehicle and perform full maintenance including changing bushings, replace capacitors, etc... and then reassemble the vehicle. It s
  • Eliminating the middle man, never as simple as it sounds. About 50% of the human race is middlemen and they don't take kindly to being eliminated.

  • I have no fondness for Tesla or the "electric car revolution", but car dealers should not be the ones deciding the future either. In fact, the dealership model (in the US) is to make money with volume - which mean cheap, under-optioned and option-packaged cars. This means that unless you are very very motivated, you can't buy a vehicle that is best for you. Dealers can move cheap cars the fastest - they source them with pre-packaged options (e.g. if you want active lane departure prevention, you have to get

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