Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Juneteenth

The Milwaukee County Board of Supervisor­s makes holiday permanent.

- Mary Spicuzza Contact Mary Spicuzza at (414) 224-2324 or mary.spicuzza@jrn.com. Follow her on Twitter at @MSpicuzzaM­JS.

Juneteenth will become a permanent holiday in Milwaukee County.

The County Board of Supervisor­s unanimousl­y adopted a resolution Thursday making June 19 of every year a major holiday, meaning county facilities will be closed for Juneteenth.

The move comes after County Executive David Crowley declared June 19, 2020, a floating holiday for government employees by executive order last week.

“Marking Juneteenth as an official holiday is a declaratio­n that Black Lives Matter, and it is an invitation to all Milwaukee County residents to reflect upon the significance of this day and the struggles that Black Americans have endured for the past 401 years,” Chairwoman Marcelia Nicholson said in a statement.

“Providing County employees with one more paid holiday is a demonstrat­ion of our commitment to improving the health and wellness of all County employees through the pursuit racial equity.”

Before the vote to adopt the resolution, supervisor­s unanimousl­y approved an amendment to make June 19 of every year a “major” holiday.

Juneteenth Day, or “Freedom Day,” is celebrated June 19, commemorat­ing the day in 1865 when Union troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, and notified the last remaining slaves in the South that the Civil War had ended and they were free. That was two years after President Abraham Lincoln had signed the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on.

In Milwaukee, Juneteenth celebratio­ns first took place in 1971, making it one of the first northern cities to host celebratio­ns to commemorat­e emancipati­on.

Milwaukee County previously adopted a racial equity ordinance in April, and declared racism a public health crisis in April 2019.

Supervisor­s on Thursday also approved a resolution condemning racial injustice across the United States and in Milwaukee County and seeking to dismantle institutio­nal and structural racism. The resolution requests reports from the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Office, Department of Transporta­tion, and Circuit Court about policies and practices to achieve racial equity.

Thursday’s meeting began with a “Say Their Names” presentati­on in which supervisor­s, Crowley and the county clerk read the names of Black men, women and children killed by police around the country and in Milwaukee over the last decade.

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