
Originally Posted by
p.dath
I was considering the returning riders who figure highly in accident figures, and are likely to figure more highly due to the aging population shift, and how to help them reduce the medical expense that ACC incurs.
It would be a way of helping ensure they got some education to help them back into riding safely.
Very few motorcycle riders set out with the deliberate intention of falling off and hurting themselves, this is particularly true of "older" riders, whoever they are.
"Returning riders" being more at risk than others is a statistical manipulation. ACC and other agencies like NZTA have data sets with limited precision -- they can't distinguish between motorcycle types, particularly scroters, so I doubt that they have little meaningful data about age vs experience for motorcyclists other than data collected from accidents reported to ACC.
Unless the bar is going to be set substantially higher in terms of driver/rider competence, whether for licensing or compulsory insurance purposes, people will not seek road skills "education" unless they see value in it. Road transport officials are passionately against increasing driver/rider skills training because they believe that that makes drivers/riders overconfident. Compulsory third-party insurance isn't likely to be a goer at any time in the near future either.
Hypothetical speculative nonsense serves little value.
"Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]
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