Right to Repair / Fixit Clinic Panel Discussion and Demo
Wednesday, 22 January 2025
19:00 – 21:00
19:00 – 21:00
This event that has already happened.
NOTE: Live streaming is available but MUST buy a ticket to attend in person at https://www.kqed.org/event/4915
Fixit Clinic is featured in a combination live-streamed / in-person panel discussion and demo activity at KQED Headquarters in San Francisco. Don't miss it, and tell your San Francisco-based friends: https://www.kqed.org/event/4915
Wanna attend but can’t make it in-person? KQED’s streaming it live for free so anyone anywhere can watch: register for that by clicking on the red “Register for in Person” button on the link above.
Fixit Clinics are fun community-based workshops where neighbors, friends, and families work collectively to learn how to repair broken items.
Fixit Clinic is part of the Right to Repair movement, which is gaining traction nationwide, with California becoming the latest state to pass a law meant to empower consumers to fix their own stuff instead of buying new. In 2009, Peter Mui, a longtime champion of the Right to Repair movement, launched a Fixit Clinic in Berkeley. These volunteer-run pop-up workshops allow participants to teach each other how to mend broken appliances.
Joined by the team behind KQED’s local news podcast The Bay, Mui helps us understand what’s so appealing about the Right to Repair movement, and discusses changes in California law requiring appliance and electronics manufactures to give consumers the tools they need to fix their own stuff. The event will also include a hands-on workshop about how to fix broken objects!
This event is kid-friendly! Suitable for ages 8+
Speakers:
Azul Dahlstrom-Eckman, KQED Reporter
Peter Mui, Founder, FixIt Clinic
Samantha Nunez, Student IT Project Manager, Oakland Unified School District
Elizabeth Chamberlain, Director of Sustainability, iFixit
Fixit Clinic is featured in a combination live-streamed / in-person panel discussion and demo activity at KQED Headquarters in San Francisco. Don't miss it, and tell your San Francisco-based friends: https://www.kqed.org/event/4915
Wanna attend but can’t make it in-person? KQED’s streaming it live for free so anyone anywhere can watch: register for that by clicking on the red “Register for in Person” button on the link above.
Fixit Clinics are fun community-based workshops where neighbors, friends, and families work collectively to learn how to repair broken items.
Fixit Clinic is part of the Right to Repair movement, which is gaining traction nationwide, with California becoming the latest state to pass a law meant to empower consumers to fix their own stuff instead of buying new. In 2009, Peter Mui, a longtime champion of the Right to Repair movement, launched a Fixit Clinic in Berkeley. These volunteer-run pop-up workshops allow participants to teach each other how to mend broken appliances.
Joined by the team behind KQED’s local news podcast The Bay, Mui helps us understand what’s so appealing about the Right to Repair movement, and discusses changes in California law requiring appliance and electronics manufactures to give consumers the tools they need to fix their own stuff. The event will also include a hands-on workshop about how to fix broken objects!
This event is kid-friendly! Suitable for ages 8+
Speakers:
Azul Dahlstrom-Eckman, KQED Reporter
Peter Mui, Founder, FixIt Clinic
Samantha Nunez, Student IT Project Manager, Oakland Unified School District
Elizabeth Chamberlain, Director of Sustainability, iFixit
