STAND for Hannah: Thorne family looks to curb reckless driving - Action News
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STAND for Hannah: Thorne family looks to curb reckless driving

Friends and family of alleged street racing victim Hannah Thorne are standing up against dangerous driving with a new project they hope will create lasting change in Newfoundland and Labrador.

18-year-old Hannah Thorne was killed in an alleged street racing accident in July.

18-year-old Hannah Thorne's family is coming together to raise awareness about the dangers of reckless driving. (Facebook)

Friends and familyof alleged street racing victim Hannah Thorne are standing up against dangerous driving with a new projectthey hope will create lasting change in Newfoundland and Labrador.

Thorne, 18, was in a car driven by her 81-year-old grandmother when it collided head-on with a pickup on a stretch of highway known as the New Harbour Barrens.

In August, Brian Robert King and Steven Ryan Mercer were arrested and charged with street racing causing death.

Dwayne Legge, a relative of Hannah Thorne,saidSTAND(Standing Together Against Negligent Driving)for Hannah will look to educate the public on the dangers of reckless drivingand work to drive legislative change.

Relative Dwayne Legge says S.T.A.N.D hopes to meet with lawmakers to hold individuals charged with reckless driving more accountable. (S.T.A.N.D)

"We'd like to see an amendment to the Highway Traffic Act to include a policy which would immediately suspend a driver's licence when evidence supports that there is negligence at play in an accident," he said.

Legge said it's been a difficult summer since Thorne's death.

"She had just graduated high school and she was getting ready to start her future." he said.

"With everything being in the news now and the court cases, it makes it difficult for the family but we're determined to drive some change now."

Family and friends hold pictures of Hannah Thorne outside the Harbour Grace courthouse in August. (Glenn Payette/CBC)

Legge said STANDmet with Service NLthis week and that early discussions were promising.

"Government has committed to do a jurisdictional scan to see what other provinces are doing, keep us in the loop, bring our recommendations forward and work with us to make these changes," he said.

In the week since the STAND group was formed on Facebookover 2,200 people have joined, and Legge said he's encouraged for the future.

"We are committed to moving this forward, raising awareness andtrying to drive change."

With files from the St. John's Morning Show