Kendall Wiebe died after an SUV crashed into the hair salon she was working at in April 2012. The man who pleaded guilty to crashing into a hair salon, killing Kendall Wiebe in the process, is going to jail, but Wiebe's father said more needs to be done to keep dangerous drivers off the road.

Adebola Shoyoye, 35, was sentenced Thursday afternoon in Winnipeg after pleading guilty earlier this month to dangerous operation of a motor vehicle causing death.

The judge sentenced him to serve 90 days intermittently behind bars. Shoyoye has also been banned from driving for eight years.

Art Wiebe said the sentence doesn't bring his daughter back and questioned how the specific length of the jail term was reached.

"How do you qualify the value of life? It's priceless," said Wiebe. "Justice would mean that nobody would get killed from a senseless situation."

After completing his sentence, Shoyoye will undergo two years of supervised probation. He'll also have to complete 120 hours of community service.

Shoyoye mistook gas for brake: Lawyer

Shoyoye's Jeep was going 100 km/h when it plowed into the front of an Ultracuts on Portage Avenue in April 2012. Wiebe, 27, was working inside and was hit.

At the time of the crash, police said Shoyoye lost control of the vehicle, which then crossed Portage, went over a curb and veered across the parking lot of a Safeway before slamming into the salon.

Shoyoye's lawyer has said his client thought the gas pedal was the brake pedal.

Shoyoye came to Canada from Nigeria in 2002 with two sisters to start a better life. He earned his citizenship in 2007. He has a degree in criminology and attended the University of Manitoba from 2003-2008.

The deadly crash in 2012 was the latest in a string of bad driving offences for Shoyoye. In total, Shoyoye has been involved in 11 collisions in the past 10 years, eight of which were determined to be his fault.

In the years since the deadly crash, Shoyoye still possessed his drivers licence, but had it removed April 13 in court by the judge overlooking the case.

'Something needs to change': Wiebe

Police investigate the scene of the crash at the Ultracuts hair salon on April 7, 2012 (CBC) Wiebe said he doesn't understand how someone with that kind of track record could still be allowed on the road.

"Something needs to change, something that will keep drivers accountable so that a person that has a poor driving record won't be allowed to have a valid drivers licence," said Wiebe.

The case has since prompted the introduction of new provincial legislation this week that will result in drivers being suspended sooner for high-risk driving infractions.

The proposed change to the Highway Traffic Act means drivers can have their licenses suspended after a high-risk driving charge, rather than Manitoba Public Insurance having to wait for a court conviction.

Wiebe's father said he has forgiven Shoyoye but he will never forget the crash that killed his daughter.