They are talking about putting sideskirts around the recovery vehicles.. That is only one part of it, i'm all for it but controlling the situation better is the first part, imho. Skirting the JCBs is like bandage, a quick fix that takes care of the symptoms but not the actual cause: discipline during yellow flag. This is like taking care of toddler by padding every single corner they bump their heads and expecting them to learn from that.. They will only learn to run faster, there are studies about this: you put a helmet on a cyclist, cars will drive closer to them, both sides take more risks and while the severity of accidents drops, the total will rise. I'm not against helmets but you can't simply pad every single surface on a F1 circuit and expect drivers to behave like there is no padding.. Skirting JCBs is just the wrong message; double yellows = don't worry, minor inconvenience.
Note, this is also one the last Old School tracks with gravel runoffs. The same thing can't happen in Bahrain.. But Dunlop curve is those special places, not even tarmac runoffs help if you go off track flat out during rain. We pretty much can conclude that every driver took Dunlop during double yellows too fast and race control could not or would not start handing penalties at that point. Meaning, the speed Jules went off track was legal, he did what he was asked to do. So saying "he took it too fast" has to be remembered that it means "he had to drive too fast".