Gov. Jeff Colyer stands with Barby Jobe, Robin Thornburg and Doug Thornburg stand beside the Lost to DUI Roadside Memorial, which honors their children who died in a a drunk driving crash in 2011. |
The first DUI
Roadside Memorial Marker in the state was unveiled on Monday, April 9 at the KDOT office in Ellsworth. The new Lost to
DUI memorial markers are a part of the Kyle Thornburg and Kylie Jobe Believe
Act that was approved by the Kansas Legislature and signed by former Gov. Sam
Brownback in 2016.
The Kyle Thornburg
and Kylie Jobe Believe Act honors these two students who were killed on March
23, 2011. Jobe and Thornburg were returning to Wichita from a Colorado
ski trip during spring break. They were both killed in a crash on I-70
when a 27-year-old man entered the interstate going in the wrong direction and
hit them head on. He was also killed and was later found to have a blood
alcohol level of .23, almost three times the legal limit.
At the request
of Barby Jobe Myers (Kylie’s mother), former Rep. Mark Hutton brought forth
legislation to create and install roadside signs to memorialize victims of
drunk/impaired driving. “We hope the memorial markers encourage people to
reflect on the innocent lives lost to someone driving under the influence.
We also believe the signs will create an awareness about personal
responsibility and an understanding that some choices have consequences that
affect more people than just themselves,” said Jobe Myers.
The legislation
established and implemented a DUI memorial signage program on highways under
the Secretary of Transportation’s jurisdiction that are not city connecting
links. A memorial marker was designed with a unique logo symbolizing the
cycle of life and an individual thumbprint with the title, Lost to DUI. Below
that, the names and ages of victims lost to a drunk driver are listed.
The marker for Jobe and Thornburg stands at the scene of the crash at
mile marker 210 on eastbound I-70.
Remembering those whose lives have been cut short because of drunk driving may not bring the victims back, but we can honor their memory and work to raise awareness about the dangers and consequences of driving while intoxicated.
Remembering those whose lives have been cut short because of drunk driving may not bring the victims back, but we can honor their memory and work to raise awareness about the dangers and consequences of driving while intoxicated.
For more
information about the memorial marker program, please visit: https://kdotapp.ksdot.org/MemorialMarker/index.aspx
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