Indiana Couple Works to Bring Good From Wedding Day Crash
Tom and Lauren Hanley’s wedding day turned tragic two years ago when a traffic accident killed a groomsman and injured others in their bridal party.
The Indianapolis couple is now using some of their settlement in a lawsuit from the crash to support a mutual passion to get youth active through bicycling.
They are donating $25,000 in a challenge grant to a nonprofit organization co-founded by Tom Hanley, called Nine13sports, which provides free cycling programs for youth.
Both of them are athletic and enjoy cycling. They credit sports and exercise with helping them deal with the aftermath of the tragedy on June 5, 2010.
On that day, the couple and the bridal party were riding on a shuttle bus for a photo session when the driver ran a red light at the intersection of South and Delaware streets in Downtown Indianapolis, colliding with another vehicle. The crash killed Tom Hanley’s best friend, Jim Douglas, 29, Indianapolis, and injured 14 others on the bus.
The wedding ceremony went on, but at Methodist Hospital, where some in the wedding party were treated for their injuries.
The Hanleys and some other riders sued John Mavris, the Mavris Arts and Event Center where the wedding was planned and the shuttle bus company, claiming negligence for providing an unsafe vehicle that was too small to accommodate the party and a driver who was not properly licensed to operate the shuttle. All parties to the lawsuit settled last week, but terms don’t permit him to release the full amount, said Tom Hanley, 25, who has won several national cycling championships.
The rest of their legal settlement, Tom Hanley says, will go toward paying already incurred medical costs from a mild traumatic brain injury and two broken vertebrae he suffered. But he said they accepted a less-than-desirable settlement, as no provisions were made for future medical costs, expected to exceed $300,000 for medications and other treatment. His brain injury affects his speech and cognitive skills, including word usage, name recall and spatial recognition.
Lauren Hanley, 27, who dealt with cervical cancer before they were married, escaped with minor injuries. She’s now a crime analysis supervisor for the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.
While the last few years have been hard, Tom Hanley said they’re trying to make positive things come from the accident.
“The events of the tragedy will forever be part of who we are,” he said. “Our passion for community and the belief that Nine13sports is part of the solution to combat childhood obesity in Central Indiana lets this pledge back up our words with action.”
Nine13sports, formed in 2009 by Hanley and two partners, provides six-week exercise programs using stationary bicycle simulators for youth ages 8 to 18 at schools and youth-focused groups, including the Indianapolis Boys and Girls Clubs this summer.
The bicycles are linked to a computer, which projects the riders’ speed and distance on a big-screen TV. They follow courses with simulated hills and other challenges.
“This matching gift challenge idea is quite simple,” said John Singleton, operations director for Nine13sports. “It allows us to find nine grant and endowment organizations or individual benefactors who are willing make the same pledge as the Hanley family.”
Although the challenge sets out to identify nine benefactors willing to pledge $25,000 each, Singleton said the real goal is to raise $225,000 from anyone in any amount to support the organization’s work for two years. The group is on track to provide 7,500 interactions with about 2,500 youth this year. It plans to work with Sidener Academy in Indianapolis Public Schools and other schools in a few weeks.
The couple has specified their donation be in memory of Douglas, the friend they lost. The executive staff at Nine13sports is pursuing grants already in process and starting communication with potential new donors.
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