Los Angeles Times

The DMV, where age discrimina­tion is legal

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Re “Test questions drive seniors up the wall,” column, April 16

Many drivers over 70 years old who must take a test to renew their license most likely remember Jesse Unruh, the longtime California legislator who authored the Unruh Civil Rights Act. The law establishe­d that no California business shall discrimina­te against anyone for any reason, including age.

The 1959 law has been amended multiple times to evolve with our changing state, but the California Department of Motor Vehicles is still allowed to discrimina­te based on age by requiring drivers older than 70 to take a knowledge test to renew their license, regardless of their record.

Drivers starting from ages 16 to 69 can simply renew without a test. Is that fair or equitable to drivers who are over the age of 70?

I know seniors who are giving up their license simply because they do not want to deal with going to the DMV or are intimidate­d by its non-user-friendly technology. That is wrong.

It is disgusting how the DMV treats senior drivers. If it truly cares about their safety, it needs to create an ageappropr­iate renewal process, because the current system and knowledge test simply promote age discrimina­tion.

Ken Walsh, Los Angeles

Driving an automobile is a skill that requires alertness, reactive ability and anger management skills. Registrati­on and testing are part and parcel of the privilege of driving an automobile.

If only firearms were as regulated as vehicles on the public roadways, our society would function in a saner and safer fashion. Ben Miles Huntington Beach

Steve Lopez’s column on license renewal for seniors hit it on the nose.

Just recently I took the DMV’s written test. I studied the driver’s handbook numerous times and practiced the exam. I am a retired teacher whose age is on the other side of 70, and I flunked the DMV’s test.

Yes, I’d rather just take the behind-the-wheel test or have my doctor or adult children vouch for my competence as a driver. That would be better than trying to remember laws that pertain to driving a big rig, the blood alcohol limit for 18-year-olds or the penalty for abandoning an animal on the highway.

I’d write more about this, but I have to study for the DMV test that I must take again. Barbara Azrialy

Los Angeles

 ?? Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times ?? A DMV WORKER administer­s an eye exam at the agency’s Westminste­r office in 2020. Drivers older than 70 must take a knowledge test to renew their license.
Irfan Khan Los Angeles Times A DMV WORKER administer­s an eye exam at the agency’s Westminste­r office in 2020. Drivers older than 70 must take a knowledge test to renew their license.

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