The assessment can be required of Class 5 and 7 drivers with medical conditions that may affect motor, cognitive and sensory functions required for driving. Walters’ daughter, Alexis Walters Whyte, said a road test during a second wave of COVID-19 and with her father among the demographic most at risk is “a dangerous and scary thing.” “They think it’s OK to schedule road tests in a pandemic with seniors … well, it’s not. It’s unconscionable. It’s foolish. It’s bureaucratic nonsense with no consideration for the most vulnerable in our society,” she said. Drivers are asked to complete Enhanced Road Assessment tests for any number of reasons, including medical conditions, collisions, results of previous driving assessments or reports from police or other drivers.