with a 3M blue splice
OMG you use those? Say it ain't so!!!
I hate them, for so many reasons, but they work, are easy to use, and are cheap so a lot of people use them. Personally I solder any splices and heat-shrink or tape as necessary, or I make up y-adapters using bits from my big box of junk wiring harnesses
mystic_1
Personally, I don't use them, but for the novice they often make a better connection than the K-Mart crimpers and solderless connectors will.
Aye to that
Although the local K-Marts around here have all closed down so the cheap tool alternative is Walmart or Harbor Freight
Back on topic, adding extra ground wires certainly isn't going to hurt anything but shouldn't be used as a band-aid. The stock configuration should work. If you have a problem inside your harness, then the odds are good that the ground isn't the only problem and you should be doing some surgery on the harness. It seems daunting I know but with care it only takes a couple of sessions to strip and rebuild the harness. A couple of hours to get it out, a few hours working on it, a couple hours getting it back in. It's all color coded and keyed so it's pretty straight forward, just there's LOTS of connections especially in the shell. Fixing any problems you may find usually comes down to replacing wiring or re-soldering connections, little cost involved just time.
While the harness is apart, you could even upgrade the main ground runs to larger gauge wire (or run parallel redundant grounds), upgrade the main power runs similarly, add extra power lines for accessories or lights, etc. Clean the connectors. Re-wrap with self fusing tape.
With planning you'll only need to do this once, and you'll have a trouble-free harness for years to come.
mystic_1
PS do the next owner a favor and document your changes