Los Angeles Times

Nike, NFL to give staff Juneteenth off

- Associated press

Nike, the NFL and other businesses will give their employees a day off for Juneteenth for the first time this year, the latest example of how American employers are responding to protests that have placed additional attention on racial injustice in the U.S.

Juneteenth commemorat­es June 19, 1865, when Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger came to Galveston, Texas, to announce the end of the Civil War and slavery. Although slavery had been abolished more than two years earlier by the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on, it continued in some areas.

Texans began celebratin­g the day a year later with parades and parties. It’s not a federal holiday, but most states observe it in some way, except three: Hawaii, North Dakota and South Dakota, according to a list compiled by the Congressio­nal Research Service.

Businesses have been forced to reexamine their policies after pressure from employees and ongoing protests over the death of George Floyd on May 25 after a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee into the handcuffed Black man’s neck for nearly nine minutes.

Some businesses have professed support for the Black Lives Matter movement or pledged to donate money to organizati­ons. Others have promised to hire more Black workers or make other policy changes.

This week, Nike Chief Executive John Donahoe told workers they would get Juneteenth off starting this year as a way to celebrate Black culture and history.

“Our expectatio­n is that each of us use this time to continue to educate ourselves and challenge our perspectiv­es and learn,” Donahoe wrote in a memo. “I know that is what I intend to do.”

NFL Commission­er Roger Goodell, who last week said that the league was wrong to not listen to football players who have protested police brutality on the field since 2016, wrote in a note Friday that its offices would be closed June 19.

“The power of this historical feat in our country’s blemished history is felt each year,” Goodell wrote in a memo. “But there is no question that the magnitude of this event weighs even more heavily today in the current climate.”

After getting feedback from Black employees, the New York Times said it would give employees an additional day off and encouraged them to use it June 19.

This week, Twitter cofounder and CEO Jack Dorsey tweeted that U.S. employees would have Juneteenth off “forevermor­e” as a day for “celebratio­n, education, and connection.” Dorsey said employees at Square, the mobile payment services company he also runs, would get the day off too.

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