Sask. erects 1st official roadside memorial - Action News
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Saskatoon

Sask. erects 1st official roadside memorial

Mothers Against Drunk Driving will unveil Saskatchewan's first official roadside memorials Tuesday, to remember victims of drunk driving.

Signs north of Saskatoon will honour Van de Vorst family, killed in 2016 by a drunk driver

The unveiling of a new memorial for the Van de Vorst family. (Trevor Bothorel/CBC)

For years, loved ones have left flowers and teddy bears at the site of roadside tragedies.

On Tuesday, Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) unveiled Saskatchewan's first official roadside memorial for victims of impaired driving, north of Saskatoon.

The roadside memorial created for the Van de Vorst family. (Trevor Bothorel/CBC)

The signs will honour Jordan andChandaVan de Vorst, along with their five-year-old daughter,Kamryn, and two-year-old son,Miguire Van de Vorst.

The family of four was killed a year and a half ago, when a drunk driver blew through the intersection of Wanuskewin Road and Highway 11.

Lou Van de Vorst, back, at the unveiling of a new memorial for Jordan and Chanda Van de Vorst, along with their five-year-old daughter, Kamryn, and two-year-old son, Miguire Van de Vorst. (Jennifer Quesnel/CBC News)
The crowd at Tuesday's unveiling of a memorial for members of the Van de Vorst family, who were killed by an impaired drive in 2016. (Jennifer Quesnel/CBC News)

Linda and Lou Van deVorst will attend the unveiling ceremony north of Saskatoon.

They'll be joined by Marie Mierau, Chanda's mother, deputy premier Don Morgan, Saskatoon Police Chief CliveWeighill, and Patricia Hynes-Coates, the president of MADDCanada.

The province and MADDCanada call the signs asymbol of remembranceand a reminder to the public about the dangers of impaired driving.

Jordan and Chanda Van de Vorst and their two-year-old son, Miguire, and five-year-old daughter, Kamryn, were killed in January 2016, as they were driving home to Saskatoon along Highway 11. (Van de Vorst family vigil/Facebook)