ChatterBank0 min ago
Elderly Drivers
'Elderly drivers may face 'annual checks' to prove they are 'not a danger to the public'
they may soon be forced to go for annual checks to ensure they are still safe to get behind the wheel if a new campaign is successful in changing the law.' Express.
Does this make sense?
they may soon be forced to go for annual checks to ensure they are still safe to get behind the wheel if a new campaign is successful in changing the law.' Express.
Does this make sense?
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No best answer has yet been selected by Khandro. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.It makes sense. I'm not sure saying others are "worse" is really the point. In most cases, the onus is on drivers to make sure their eyesight is a standard to read a number plate and they have to inform DVLA of certain conditions, it's quite clear.
But reactions do decrease with age (I don't know what age it would be worked out to be). And that's something drivers very rarely notice for themselves, as there is nothing to compare it with- until there is an accident.
But reactions do decrease with age (I don't know what age it would be worked out to be). And that's something drivers very rarely notice for themselves, as there is nothing to compare it with- until there is an accident.
As both the number of cars on the road, and the number of older drivers both increase, an additional safeguarding test would seem appropriate.
Personally, I would raise the driving age to twenty-one in an effort to cut down the vast numbers of accidents among younger drivers, and I would instigate a mandatory test every twelve months for every driver over seventy, with a re-test, and then a second failure resulting in the withdrawal of the licence.
We cannot go on pretending that our roads are as they were when I passed my test nearly fifty years ago, and safety constraints should reflect those changes.
Personally, I would raise the driving age to twenty-one in an effort to cut down the vast numbers of accidents among younger drivers, and I would instigate a mandatory test every twelve months for every driver over seventy, with a re-test, and then a second failure resulting in the withdrawal of the licence.
We cannot go on pretending that our roads are as they were when I passed my test nearly fifty years ago, and safety constraints should reflect those changes.
I remember really clearly that when I took my test, it didn't say that I was now qualified to drive, what it did say was that i was qualified to continue learning without supervision, which is something entirely different.
The idea that a seventeen-year-old can roar off down the motorway at seventy miles an hour as soon as they pass their test is asking for fatal accidents, and delivering them.
Similarly, the way that young drivers learn a host of dreadful habits - not least the notion of indestructibility - because they drive unsupervised after a short period of experience, leads to the sorts of accidents that make headlines every single day.
We should accept that it's not the 1930's anymore, and stop teaching and testing drivers as though it is.
The idea that a seventeen-year-old can roar off down the motorway at seventy miles an hour as soon as they pass their test is asking for fatal accidents, and delivering them.
Similarly, the way that young drivers learn a host of dreadful habits - not least the notion of indestructibility - because they drive unsupervised after a short period of experience, leads to the sorts of accidents that make headlines every single day.
We should accept that it's not the 1930's anymore, and stop teaching and testing drivers as though it is.
While everyone should make sure that their eyes are up to the mark if they drive, I can't help feeling that the idea of getting older people off the road is a back door idea of reducing traffic in general. Its been said many times that younger drivers are the main culprit for bad driving. Should any law come into play for getting older drivers off the road for any other reason than safety, if proven, then the new small car market will take a massive it, a lot of older drivers change their car every two/ three years, but may be thats all part of the governments plan??