Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Deadly stretch of Highway 207 sparks outrage and calls for change

A cross memorializing Colin Roer on Highway 207. Adrian Cheung/Global News

WINNIPEG — The crosses on the side of the road stick out as tombstones driving down Highway 207, near Lorette.

Story continues below advertisement

That small stretch of road, that passes through the town 30 kilometres southeast of Winnipeg, has become a veritable graveyard. RCMP say there have been five fatal crashes in five years. The latest victim is 17-year-old Colin Roer, who was killed in a Sunday morning crash near the intersection of Highway 207 and Provincial Road 31.

17-year-old Colin Roer was killed in a crash on Sunday morning.

RELATED: 17-year-old dead after vehicle rollover near Steinbach

Roer was the passenger in a car that rolled over and RCMP said alcohol is believed to be involved. The driver of the car has been taken to hospital with non-life threatening injuries. No charges have yet been filed on the incident.

Story continues below advertisement

“This has affected more than just the immediate family. It’s a community and friends,” said Michelle Sauve, Roer’s former manager at Lorette’s Co-Op gas station.

Sauve said Roer’s work family, along with the rest of the tight-knit town remains in shock. She also works as a driver’s ed teacher and added that messages of not drinking and driving are not getting through to students.

Former co-workers of Roer’s say they are in shock. Adrian Cheung/Global News

“I think some of them think they’re invincible. I think some of them think ‘It’s not going to happen to us.’ They’re just not in that moment until something happens.”

Story continues below advertisement

Manitoba Public Insurance (MPI) said 75 people were killed on Manitoba’s roads in 2015. MPI has reported that 2015’s figure has already been surpassed this year and there are still two months left in the calendar year.

READ MORE: RCMP lay charges in crash that killed Winnipeg woman

News of another person killed by impaired driving re-opens the wound for Kelly Fright. Fright’s daughter was killed by a suspected drunk driver on June 26. The 29-year-old was returning home to the R.M. of St. Anne after working a late shift when her car was struck by a pick-up truck. An 18-year-old man has been charged with a litany of offences, including impaired driving, in the crash.

Shea Fright was killed by a suspected drunk driver in June 2016. Provided by Fright family

“I wish I could’ve said ‘Goodbye’ one more time. But I can’t. I can’t hug her no more. Can’t say goodnight to her no more,” Fright said, as tears rolled down his cheeks.

Story continues below advertisement

Visiting the site of his daughter’s death takes an emotional toll on the heartbroken father. Fright said he lives a “nightmare” everyday and hearing of another person killed on the road brings up difficult memories.

Shea Fright’s cross remains on the side of the road on Highway 207. Adrian Cheung/Global News

“It’s really tough to go on without her. My wife and I are having a really difficult time. I feel really bad for the parents of the young man who lost his life on the weekend,” Fright said.

Story continues below advertisement

There are several theories by nearby residents why Highway 207 has seen many fatalities: the single lane highway puts opposing drivers close to one another, that drivers often speed, that the twisting road allows little space for drivers to pass one another.

Kelly Fright is urging people to not get behind the wheel while impaired.

The most common explanation is also the most preventable one: impaired driving is common on rural roads. Families and friends of lost loved ones, like the Fright family are urging people to not get behind the wheel if they’ve had anything to drink.

Story continues below advertisement
“It takes one phone call and you’re okay. And whoever else is on the road, they’re okay. [Death by drinking and driving] doesn’t need to happen.”
Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article