Absolutely! This, in my view, is EXACTLY where we need to be heading.
Years ago when I was a spotty-faced "yoof" I used to tear around in my (don't laugh!) Relaint. (it was a 4-legged one!) Now I still remember the odd disapproving "old git" saying that if I wanted to drive like that I could go on a race track. This just doesn't work when you're talking to kids who can't even afford the petrol to GET to a bloody race track -let alone entry fees! Besides, it was a car I shared with my mum and she didn't like the idea of me fitting a roll cage!
Now if the entry was free AND there was some tuition laid on, AND some basic scrutineering (because presumably some of the "velocipeds" operated by said "yoofs" might not be 100% roadworthy....)
I think the kids would get a real sense of "importance" - like they were being taken seriously. They might even learn some valuable skills AND get the chance to see how basic safety defects make things more dangerous. Who knows? Maybe we'll not only succeed in reducing inappropriate speeds on public roads by providing somewhere to let off steam, but we might even reduce the number of defective vehicles too AND provide better driver training into the bargain!
These kids DO care about what they drive.
Why else would they spend a "grand" on a set of wheels and tyres for a car worth £500?! IF they "failed" scrutineering in front of all their mates, for being unroadworthy, they'd never live it down.
Contrast this with the spectacularly inept efforts of the Cumbria "Safety" Camera Partnership and their "Come-dancing style radio advert where a Bruce Forsyth sound-alike is comentating on some "supposedly" poor driving. to my mind, it's absolutely GUARANTEED to egg-on the very people it's aimed at to see who can get the biggest slide!
Only thing is, the cameras MAKE money but the Knockhill scheme will COST money!
I think it's a brilliant (but expensive) idea. I'd even go further and say that if the odd one died on the track, they should still carry on wit hthe scheme despite the inevitable huge public outcry. After all, rather more than the "odd one" dies on public roads! They are naive if they think that doing it on a track will be "safe". It will be "safe-R" than a public road but as anyone why has read the back of a race ticket will know, "motorsport is dangerous"!
Absolutely TOP MARKS

To the Scots.
In fact. maybe I'll even consider emigrating to Scotland!