GLITCH AFTER GLITCH –DMV

The same government, Democrat controlled Sacramento wants to run our health care—with NO private doctors or hospitals.  These same people run the DMV.

A SENIOR citizen has called out the California DMV for their nonsensical license renewal test.

June Meyers, 90, from Westwood, California, a neighborhood in Los Angeles, took an at-home eLearning course on her home computer.

She opted for an in-person test after the website crashed three times.

“It crashed three times,” Meyers wrote in a letter to the DMV, reports the LA Times.”

Its goes on, ““Knowledge is more valuable than the ability to take a written test,” Gore told the LA Times.

“I don’t know if there’s any strong correlation between being able to pass a written test and being a safe driver,” DMV director Steve Gordon told the LA Times.

Yup—another block to freedom put up by government—so the UNIONS can have more people pay bribes to do worthless work.

GLITCH AFTER GLITCH 

‘With any luck, I’ll be dead before I have to retake it,’ says driver, 90, as she slams DMV’s ‘ridiculous’ renewal test

The DMV is encouraging its drivers to renew their license online

Alexa Cimino, The Sun,  2/18/24  https://www.the-sun.com/motors/10428729/driver-slams-dmv-license-renewal-test/

A SENIOR citizen has called out the California DMV for their nonsensical license renewal test.

June Meyers, 90, from Westwood, California, a neighborhood in Los Angeles, took an at-home eLearning course on her home computer.

She opted for an in-person test after the website crashed three times.

“It crashed three times,” Meyers wrote in a letter to the DMV, reports the LA Times.

Meyers opted for an in-person test and studied for a week straight.

She and so many other California residents said the questions were “as obscure and ridiculous” as possible.

Meyers said she passed the test, but not by a large margin.

“I don’t have to return for four years,” Meyers wrote in her letter to the DMV.

“With any luck I’ll be dead.”

DMV Deputy Director Anita Gore told the LA Times that the sad “ridiculous questions” had been removed earlier this month.

Gore told the outlet that the publicity they had been receiving from their newspaper directed more traffic to the eLearning course than the system could handle.

“Thanks to the eLearning publicity provided in part by your column, the system was temporarily overloaded, causing some users to get error messages,” Gore told the newspaper.

“Updates have been made to accommodate more volume.”

Gore said the California DMV is encouraging more drivers to renew their licenses via the eLearning course, which focuses on safe driving modules instead of memorizing facts.

“Knowledge is more valuable than the ability to take a written test,” Gore told the LA Times.

“I don’t know if there’s any strong correlation between being able to pass a written test and being a safe driver,” DMV director Steve Gordon told the LA Times.

California licenses expire five years after issuance on the driver’s birthday, according to the California DMV.

Drivers can renew their licenses from six months before the expiration date to two months after.

The U.S. Sun has reached out to the California DMV for comment.