Earth Day sign ready to unveil Lady Loggers win eight straight PAGE 7A SPORTS • 4A 142nd YEAR, No. 204 MONDAY, APRIL 13, 2015 ONE DOLLAR ‘This is why I write about elves’ ‘Get Lit’ book fest wraps up with author Q-and-A By ERICK BENGEL EO Media Group Photos by JOSHUA BESSEX — The Daily Astorian Shawna Sykes, from the Oregon Employment Department, discusses statistics revolving around wage inequalities during a panel discus- sion at the Judge Guy Boyington building Sunday. The panel was presented by the Lower Columbia Diversity Project and the Astoria and Seaside branches of the American Association of University Women. WOMEN CHALLENGE THE GAP Secretary of state, others discuss wage inequality By DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian J eanne Atkins is accom- plished. She was the state director for U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley and his chief of staff when he was Oregon House speaker. She also managed the women’s and reproductive health section at the state Department of Human Services. But when Gov. Kate Brown asked her to become secretary of state, she said she had the same twinge of self-doubt many women in the workplace experience. “First thing I went, ‘Me?’ You know, ‘What did I ever do?’” At- kins said Sunday afternoon during a panel discussion on wage in- equality by the Lower Columbia Diversity Project at the Judge Guy Boyington Building. “I’ve done a lot.” “And I tell women to be proud of what they’ve done and,” she paused, “it affects us all in that way.” Atkins — who replaced Brown in March after Brown took over from John Kitzhaber, who resigned DPLGDQLQÀXHQFHSHGGOLQJVFDQGDO LQYROYLQJKLV¿DQFpH²GHVFULEHG unconscious bias as one of the challenges women face at work. The often invisible, built-in and unfair perceptions about women FRXOG EH KDUGHU WR ÀXVK IURP WKH workplace than more overt forms of discrimination. Equal Pay Day Tuesday is Equal Pay Day, which marks how far into the new year women have to work to make as much as men earned over the previous year. Women who worked full time made 78 percent of what men earned in 2013, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. In Clatsop County, the wage gap was wider, with women at 66 percent of men. “So it’s a local problem as well as a national one,” Atkins said. “Probably there is no community that’s exempt.” With Hillary Clinton, the former U.S. secretary of state, seeking the Democratic nomination for presi- dent, and Democrats nationally us- ing the wage gap as a theme against Republicans, wage inequality will likely be a political issue in the 2016 campaign. The federal Equal Pay Act of 1963 prohibited businesses from gender-based wage discrimination against women who hold similar jobs as men. A persistent wage gap, however, has led Democrats to call for legislation such as the Pay- check Fairness Act, which would limit the reasons for wage differen- tials to factors such as education, training and experience and bar re- taliation against workers who seek or disclose wage information to validate complaints. Senate Republicans, who claim WKHOHJLVODWLRQZRXOGPDNHLWGLI¿ cult for businesses to base compen- sation on work quality and productivity, have blocked a vote on the Paycheck Fairness Act. In Oregon, where Democrats con- trol the Legislature, bills are pending that would prohibit dis- ciplinary action against workers who inquire about or disclose wage infor- mation and would make gender-based wage dis- crimination a civil rights violation. Battling bias Economists see bias — conscious or unconscious — as one of many factors that contribute to the wage gap, and perhaps a diminishing one. Jeanne Atkins, Oregon’s secretary of state, gives an update on several wage bills during a panel discussion on wage inequality. See GAP, Page 10A CANNON BEACH — The nov- elist Karen Joy Fowler said the “fab- ulous futurist” Bruce Sterling once fantasized about a Hell for Discard- ed Characters, where the inhabitants are forced to hold up signs of shame that bespeak their shortcomings: “I was two-dimensional,” “I did not ad- vance the plot,” etc. Alas, these condemned creations, unable to justify their existence on the page, were casualties of the writ- ing process, when ideas are aban- doned, plot threads are aborted and See GET LIT, Page 10A Clatsop County honors givers County: Citizens gave over 22,000 hours of service in 2014 By The Daily Astorian The Clatsop County Board of Commissioners honored various citizens with Volunteer of the Year awards Wednesday night during its regular meeting. The Board of Commissioners also approved a proclamation de- claring April 12-18 Volunteer Week in Clatsop County. In 2014, 631 volunteers provided a total of 22,619 hours of service to the county, a value of $482,921, ac- cording to the county. The Volunteer of the Year awards recipients are as follows: See GIVERS, Page 10A :DUUHQWRQ.LDKHOSV7KH+DUERUZLWKGLI¿FXOWULGH Some child sexual assault victims taken to Portland for rape exams WARRENTON — Rox- anne Williams-Morinville, the general manager of Warrenton Kia, heard from a friend that The Harbor was in need of re- liable transportation. In rare cases, children un- der 15 who are victims of sexual assault are driven to Portland for forensic medical exams because expertise is lacking at rural hospitals on the North Coast. forward with a discounted 2008 Dodge Caravan. “We felt that it was important that they have something reliable,” she said. Pediatric specialists Rather than make the four- hour round trip in a police ve- hicle, The Harbor wanted to give victims and their families another option. Williams-Morinville stepped Tension exists between so- cial-service advocates, medical experts, police and prosecutors over how best to serve young victims of sexual assault. Last summer, The Daily Astorian reported on the lack RIQXUVHVFHUWL¿HGWRWUHDWSHGL atric victims in Clatsop County and other parts of the state af- ter a 10-year-old girl was raped in Astoria. The girl, her moth- er and a younger sibling were taken by police to a Portland hospital for the rape exam. See ROXANNE, Page 10A Roxanne Wil- liams-Morin- ville, the gen- eral manager at Warrenton Kia, provided a discounted minivan to The Harbor to help transport child sexual assault vic- tims. DERRICK DePLEDGE The Daily Astorian