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Committee examines LD 2211 (automotive right‑to‑repair): definitions, enforcement changes and a 2027 compliance deadline

February 19, 2026 | 2026 Legislature ME, Maine


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Committee examines LD 2211 (automotive right‑to‑repair): definitions, enforcement changes and a 2027 compliance deadline
The committee reviewed LD 2211, the governor’s bill to implement recommendations of the automotive right‑to‑repair working group. Committee staff summarized the bill’s major elements and noted drafting considerations for members’ deliberation.

Key provisions described by the analyst include:

• Replacing the independent entity in current law with a Motor Vehicle Right to Repair Commission to monitor manufacturer compliance.

• Clarifying that requirements apply to motor vehicles model year 2002 or later (correcting a phrasing anomaly in existing statute).

• Introducing the term owner‑authorized independent repair facility (an independent repair facility authorized by a vehicle owner to receive diagnostic and repair data) and using that phrase in several places in the bill.

• Establishing a new compliance deadline of Sept. 1, 2027, for manufacturers to equip vehicles sold in the state with an interoperable, standardized owner authorization access platform.

• Revising enforcement language so the attorney general may, but is not required to, bring enforcement actions upon referrals from the commission or when the attorney general otherwise has reason to believe the law is violated; the bill allows injunctive relief and civil penalties up to $10,000 per violation.

The analyst flagged drafting issues for the committee’s attention: LD 2211 defines owner‑authorized independent repair facility but does not define 'independent repair facility' broadly, leaving ambiguity among three overlapping terms used in the bill (independent repair facility; owner‑authorized independent repair facility; manufacturer‑authorized repair shop). Staff recommended the committee consider whether to standardize language or add a separate definition of independent repair facility and to seek working‑group input on what constitutes an interoperable owner authorization access platform and on cybersecurity/privacy safeguards.

Members asked clarifying questions about the practical meaning of 'owner authorized' (the analyst said the phrase is intended to capture owner consent to share diagnostic and maintenance data with a chosen facility), whether dealer repair shops that also service other brands fall inside or outside the definition, and whether additional statutory language elsewhere clarifies the contract or authorization relationships. Staff recommended follow‑up with working‑group participants and the attorney general’s office to resolve drafting points before final committee action.

Why it matters: LD 2211 would update state law on motor vehicle data access, set a manufacturer compliance deadline, and change enforcement pathways—issues that affect vehicle owners, independent repair shops and vehicle manufacturers, as well as privacy and cybersecurity considerations.

Next steps: Committee staff recommended seeking clarification on definitions and interoperability standards from working‑group members and the attorney general’s office prior to finalizing amendments.

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