Lots of accidents this year indeed, but sadly, I think a lot of riders bring them upon themselves.
I'm not being an apologist for terrible cager drivers, but I'm saying that MC riders need to be aggressively responsible for their own safety as well - so often I see MC riders clueless to risks surrounding them - driving for extended periods in another vehicles blind spot when a simple change in speed would have them clear in a heartbeat, not adjusting their blocking position as needed to make themselves more visible while approaching an intersection (to avoid the left turn of death), removing, obscuring, or reducing lighting for cosmetic reasons, not watching cars pulling out of parking lots like hawks (you need to ASSSUME they will pull out in front of you 100% of the time), blasting past slower or stopped traffic in adjacent lanes without due dilligence to your blocking position and being prepared with an immediate out (caused a death on the 401 a few years ago for those who remember when someone pulled out of a stopped lane in front of a MC blasting down the left hand lane), and then of course there's just the blatant "riding like an idiot" people who throw caution to the wind until Karma catches up to them, which it often does.
We are the most vulnerable people on the roads and we need to ride accordingly - others WILL do stupid things around you, it's inevitable, and it's only going to get worse (at least until automation takes over) so a huge percentage of staying safe on the roads relies on the MC rider themselves.
Sadly, many of these common situations above are just not taught to people when they get their MC licence, particularly those who just go the MTO route with no training.
Accordingly, a lot of these accidents are a result of lax licensing standards.
I'm not being an apologist for terrible cager drivers, but I'm saying that MC riders need to be aggressively responsible for their own safety as well - so often I see MC riders clueless to risks surrounding them - driving for extended periods in another vehicles blind spot when a simple change in speed would have them clear in a heartbeat, not adjusting their blocking position as needed to make themselves more visible while approaching an intersection (to avoid the left turn of death), removing, obscuring, or reducing lighting for cosmetic reasons, not watching cars pulling out of parking lots like hawks (you need to ASSSUME they will pull out in front of you 100% of the time), blasting past slower or stopped traffic in adjacent lanes without due dilligence to your blocking position and being prepared with an immediate out (caused a death on the 401 a few years ago for those who remember when someone pulled out of a stopped lane in front of a MC blasting down the left hand lane), and then of course there's just the blatant "riding like an idiot" people who throw caution to the wind until Karma catches up to them, which it often does.
We are the most vulnerable people on the roads and we need to ride accordingly - others WILL do stupid things around you, it's inevitable, and it's only going to get worse (at least until automation takes over) so a huge percentage of staying safe on the roads relies on the MC rider themselves.
Sadly, many of these common situations above are just not taught to people when they get their MC licence, particularly those who just go the MTO route with no training.
Accordingly, a lot of these accidents are a result of lax licensing standards.