Young drivers are steered in the right direction

Borders secondary school pupils got behind the wheel of a pioneering new driver training initiative last week.
Chief Inspector Andy McLean briefs secondary school pupil at the young driver day at RAF Charterhall.Chief Inspector Andy McLean briefs secondary school pupil at the young driver day at RAF Charterhall.
Chief Inspector Andy McLean briefs secondary school pupil at the young driver day at RAF Charterhall.

More than 100 children, mainly aged 16, from the region’s nine secondary schools received driver training as part of the national curriculum for the first time at a two-day event at the former RAF airfield at Charterhall, near Greenlaw.

The youngsters took to the roads as part of a £73,000 initiative which will involve more than 700 students aged 14 to 17 over the course of the year.

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Under the guidance of advanced motoring instructors, the pioneering initiative assesses pupils’ awareness and attitudes towards driving through behind-the-wheel activites and discussions on the fundamentals of driving, including hazard perception and the highway code.

Young drivers get behind the wheel at Charterhall.Young drivers get behind the wheel at Charterhall.
Young drivers get behind the wheel at Charterhall.

The programme is run by a Police Scotland, IAM RoadSmart, Scottish Fire and Rescue, Scottish Ambulance Service and Scottish Borders Council in partnership with John Cleland, of Cleland of the Borders in Galashiels, who has invested in the new scheme and arranged for Volvo to provide cars for the training days.

The former British touring car champion has worked for a long time to get this sort of training onto the national curriculum.

He said: “The whole idea behind this is that in our region, 17-to-25-year-olds attribute to 25% of accidents and over-65s to another 25%, so we are aiming at both of these sections of the public. We have some of the best roads and the most beautiful scenery in the Borders, but they are also some of the most dangerous.

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“If we can save one life, why would we not pour money into something like this?”

Young drivers behind the wheel.Young drivers behind the wheel.
Young drivers behind the wheel.

The Scottish Road Safety Framework’s grant will support the team to put on 14 day-long sessions with further days planned in June, July, September and October.

Mr Cleland hopes to encourage even younger children to take part in 11 further 11 events planned over the coming year.

“We are going to have 14 and 15 year olds at the next session.

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“It we can get the kids early enough they will realise that driving is fun, it is also dangerous but it doesn’t have to be.

Young drivers get behind the wheel at Charterhall.Young drivers get behind the wheel at Charterhall.
Young drivers get behind the wheel at Charterhall.

“If we can get them to that age, when they come to 17 they will understand a lot more.

“I want to try some how to make sure that we save lives.

Police Scotland Chief Inspector Andy McLean added: “Today has been brilliant, it really has.

“For us the safety message is most important, but when we are engaging with the kids they are laughing and joking and any preconceived ideas of us go out the window. They are suddenly seeing past the uniforms.”

Young drivers behind the wheel.Young drivers behind the wheel.
Young drivers behind the wheel.
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He added: “Getting young driver education into schools as part of the curriculum has been a long-term goal for everyone involved in the partnership.

“The new initiative gives young drivers the experience they need to survive the high-risk early months of solo driving, so anything we can do to provide them with these skills to make roads safer has to be welcomed.”

Sarah Sillars, IAM RoadSmart chief executive officer, added: “IAM RoadSmart has long campaigned for road safety to be a part of the national curriculum, and through this pioneering scheme in the Scottish Borders in partnership with Volvo’s Cleland of the Borders and the Scottish emergency services, it’s starting to happen.”