144TH YEAR, NO. 60 DailyAstorian.com // THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2016 BLUES AND SEAFOOD ONE DOLLAR NATIONAL BUSINESS WOMEN’S DAY INSIDE PAGES 12A & 13A Mary Put down the cellphone and drive Todd’s up for change For nearly half her life, the bar was an Astoria mainstay By EDWARD STRATTON The Daily Astorian Danny Miller/The Daily Astorian Kelly Browning speaks during the Criminal Justice Information Systems Users Workshop and Security Summit on Tuesday . As distractions multiply, so do teen crashes BY THE NUMBERS By R.J. MARX The Daily Astorian onors students, football stars, cheerleaders, c ool kids and the H girl they called “granny at the wheel.” All share one thing in common: they are among the 4,000 teenagers who die each year in preventable car crashes, the No. 1 killer of teens in the nation . In 2015 , 3,829 teens lost their lives on the roadway — and only 25 percent of those were attributable to drinking or drugs. Fifty percent of teens killed were passengers. “Most kids are not drinking and driving,” Kelly Browning, an expert on teen drivers , told an audience of about 270 criminal justice profes- sionals at the Seaside Civic and Convention Cen- ter Tuesday. “We’re so beyond texting now. Now it’s selfi es, carpool karaoke, video chatting, S nap- chatting, Instagramming. Why is this so lethal? Because it takes all three distractions — the man- ual, the visual and most importantly, the cogni- tive. You’re not concentrating on driving.” Browning is executive director of Impact Teen Drivers, a nationwide program confront- ing the dangers and consequences of reckless and distracted driving. Distracted driving Automobile collisions have been the lead- ing cause of death for generations of American teens. But it wasn’t until 2009 that the term “dis- tracted driving” was coined. What drew Browning’s attention to the issue was a study in the early 2000s studying stress TEEN DRIVING Workshop material and further information for parents and teen drivers is available at www.impactteendrivers.org. among California Highway Patrol offi cers. “The most stressful part of their jobs, offi cers said, was responding to a scene where a young person had lost their life,” Browning said. “All because of something preventable: car crashes.” She found there were many quality programs on impairment, but there was a void addressing distracted driving. The stakes are getting higher. In 2015, there was a 7 percent increase in roadway fatalities in the U.S. I n Oregon, the increase was about 25 percent and in Washington state, 23 percent. Almost every young driver is vulnerable, she said. “I could have a kid say ‘I never text and drive,’ and two seconds later I’ll ask them if they’ve ever taken a picture while driving. ‘Oh, yeah, I’ve done that.’” See CRASHES, Page 11A 3,829 The number of teens killed on the roadways in 2015 After a quarter century as the name behind one of Astoria’s most famous haunts, Mary Todd said her life is heading in a new direction. She recently put Mary Todd’s Workers Bar & Grill in Union- town up for sale and is looking for someone to hopefully take over the business. “I want a little qui- eter” life, Todd, 56, said. “My whole life is going to be a little qui- eter now.” Todd, who lives in one of the apartments Mary above the bar, said she Todd plans to fi nd another place in Astoria and spend some time trav- eling around the region to visit her children and grandchildren . A recovering alcoholic with more than fi ve years sober, Todd said she will continue working with those suffer- ing from addiction. Mary Todd’s Todd was working at the Astoria Ply- wood Mill when it closed. She said she went looking for a job at a scary-looking bar in Uniontown, got hired and married the owner, the late Richard Todd. A year later, her name emblazoned the bar . See MARY TODD, Page 14A 25 percent increase in the amount of roadway deaths in Oregon in 2015. The increase was 23 percent in Washington. 25 percent of teen road deaths were attributable to drinking or drugs 50 percent of teens killed on the road were passengers Oregon women have it tough New report fi nds high rates of alcohol use, trauma, childcare costs By CASEY PARK The Oregonian Gov. Brown says Measure 97 needed to avoid big budget cuts By PARIS ACHEN Capital Bureau PORTLAND — Gov. Kate Brown Wednesday defended her decision to support a corporate sales tax measure as the only viable alter- native to deep cuts at state agencies and rollbacks to recent education and health care investments. Deciding to endorse Measure 97 “truly was the most diffi cult decision I have ever made during my time in offi ce,” Brown said. The measure would levy a 2.5 percent gross receipts tax on certain corporations’ Oregon sales exceed- ing $25 million and would represent the largest tax increase in the state’s history. It would raise $3 billion a year. Voters will decide whether to pass the measure in the Nov. 8 election. Brown made the comments during a full-house meeting of the Portland Business Alliance, in an appearance that one businessman described as walking into a “lion’s den.” The alliance of nearly 1,900 busi- nesses — similar to a chamber of commerce — has come out against the corporate sales tax measure and has dedicated much of its homep- age to campaigning against the tax measure. See MEASURE 97, Page 14A Pamplin Media Group Gov. Kate Brown says her en- dorsement of Measure 97, a controversial corporate tax pro- posal, “truly was the most diffi- cult decision I have ever made during my time in office.” Oregon women have the nation’s high- est rates of reported depression and heavy alcohol use. More than half say they have experienced sexual or domestic violence, one of the worst rates in the country, offi - cials at a new Oregon foundation have found. And Oregon is one of the least afford- able states for working mothers to care for children, with a year of daycare now more expensive than annual tuition at a state university. Offi cials at the new Women’s Founda- tion of Oregon say they hope the “Count Her In” report, released Wednesday, will be a wakeup call. It’s the fi rst comprehen- sive look at Oregon women and girls in nearly two decades. And it is grim. “When you read this list, it’s just irrefut- able that Oregon has a problem with gender equity,” said Sue Hildick, president of the Chalkboard Project and the board chair for the new foundation. “And it’s deep.” See WOMEN, Page 8A