LETTER | Another Life Lost: When Will We Act on Animals in the Road?

It’s with a saddened heart and overwhelming grief that I write to your news portal today.
Since the accident on Friars Hill Road last Friday, I’ve been mourning my friend, Brenton Bristol, and the pain feels heavier with each passing day. It still doesn’t feel real. One moment, he was here with us, full of life, warmth, and plans for the future, and in an instant, he was taken away.
Brenton was not just another name in a headline. He was a friend who made ordinary days brighter. He was the person you could count on for a smile, a helping hand, or a good laugh when you needed it most. Losing him so suddenly has left those of us who loved him struggling to understand how such a vibrant soul could be gone because of an animal wandering onto the road.
As I grieve, my sorrow is tangled with frustration, because this is not the first life lost on our roads under similar circumstances. How many more friends, brothers, mothers, and fathers must we bury before something changes? How many more families must receive that devastating phone call? Every time I pass a stretch of road where animals roam freely, I wonder whose life might be next.
Brenton deserved better. We all do. Roads should not be death traps where drivers must choose between swerving into danger or crashing into animals they had no chance to avoid. This tragedy raises a painful but necessary question: how many more people will have to die before we take meaningful action to prevent these accidents?
I write this letter not only in memory of my friend, but in hope, hope that his death will not be another statistic, hope that the authorities and our community will finally address the dangers that have been ignored for too long. No one should have to mourn a loved one in this way again.
Grieving,
Javorne Moore
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