USA TODAY International Edition

Companies set day as holiday

Will Nike, corporate celebratio­ns make a difference?

- Mike Snider

Businesses rush to recognize June 19, but will it stick?

This year’s Juneteenth holiday, which is on Friday, may be the most celebrated in decades.

Amid the backdrop of more than two weeks of nationwide protests against police brutality and racism after the death of George Floyd, major companies and organizati­ons have rushed to recognize Juneteenth as a holiday for their employees or in some fashion. The move has been met as a welcome recognitio­n that Black history is a shared American history but also with a bit of concern that it be more than a short- lived gesture.

Twitter, Nike and the NFL are just some of the biggest names raising the mainstream profile of Juneteenth by giving their employees a paid holiday to recognize the date.

Some find the fact that companies are scrambling to do so somewhat ironic since Juneteenth – a mashup of the month’s name and the date, the 19th – came to be because of a delay in alerting all enslaved people that they were freed by the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on issued in September of 1862 and effective Jan. 1, 1863. It wasn’t until June 19, 1865 – over two years after the proclamati­on took effect – with the arrival of Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger in Galveston, Texas, that residents there learned that President Abraham Lincoln had declared “that all persons held as slaves” had been freed and that slave owners needed to comply.

Other companies officially observing Juneteenth as a paid holiday for employees beginning this year include Adobe, Mastercard, Lyft, Postmates, Quicken Loans, Square, Uber and retailers Best Buy, Target and J. C. Penney. Media companies including The New York Times, The Washington Post and Vox Media have also made Juneteenth a company holiday.

“We recognize that the racial trauma the country is experienci­ng now is not new, but throughout recent weeks there has been a sense that this time is, and has to be, different,” said Target CEO and chairman Brian Cornell in a post on the corporate web site. “Juneteenth takes on additional significance in this moment.”

Like many other companies, Target has also pledged to improve diversity and has committed funding ($ 10 million) to organizati­ons focused on improving racial and social justice. “Moving now to recognize it on an annual basis – as a day to celebrate, further educate ourselves or connect with our communitie­s – is one more important action Target can take as a company to

Like many other companies, Target has also pledged to improve diversity and has committed funding ($ 10 million) to organizati­ons focused on improving racial and social justice.

help the country live up to the ideal of moving forward in a new way,” Cornell said.

Banks including JPMorgan Chase & Co., U. S. Bank and Fifth Third Bank will be closing early that day in observance of the holiday.

Electronic Arts CEO Andrew Wilson last week announced Friday as a paid day of “company- wide volunteeri­ng” with forums and activities employees can participat­e in. The game publisher is hosting a schedule of events led by its Black employee resource group, involving “12 hours of virtual events including panel discussion­s, fireside chats, and a Town Hall featuring special guests,” the company said.

Similarly, Amazon and Google employees have been sent memos encouragin­g them to cancel meetings and “use this day to create space for learning and reflection,” according to Google’s memo, reported by Reuters.

“Please take some time to reflect, learn, and support each other,” Jeff Bezos told employees in a memo, a copy of which was given to USA TODAY.

General Motors will have employees on Friday observe 8 minutes and 46 seconds of silence, the amount of time a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee on the neck of George Floyd on May 25, leading to Floyd’s death.

“Employers are starting to say... we should be honoring this day and celebratin­g and educating and training employees about this topic,” said Amber Clayton, director of the Society for Human Resource Management’s Knowledge Center. “So that is why many employers are looking at that saying, ‘ Let’s offer this as a day off to do these things.’”

Online entertainm­ent services are on board, too. Spotify is making the date a paid employee holiday and will exclusivel­y feature Black artists in its New Music Friday playlist.

Netflix has curated a special Black Lives Matter collection, and Hulu has moved new releases from Friday out of respect.

Music site Bandcamp will donate 100% of its share of sales on Friday to the NAACP.

New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam are giving state workers the day off, and both Democrats want to make the date a state holiday. Last year, Northam was called to step down after being accused of appearing in a yearbook photo that showed a man donning blackface and another in full Ku Klux Klan regalia.

Juneteenth not taught in school

In school, students are taught about Independen­ce Day and the Emancipati­on Proclamati­on – but not everyone learns about Juneteenth in the classroom.

Many learned about Juneteenth by watching the TV show “Black- ish,” says marketing and communicat­ions expert Courtney Newell, who is also the author of “Future Proof: The Blueprint for Building a Brand Gen Z & Millennial­s Love.”

The ABC series devoted its 2017 season premiere to the holiday. “A lot of people were like, ‘ I didn’t even know about that until I watched that episode’,” she said. “It’s not taught in schools.”

The focus on Juneteenth “is a big awakening for a lot of people and it’s inclusive, too,” Newell said. “It’s not just for Black people, it’s really the celebratio­n of Black history, which is also American history.”

As a youngster and teen in the late 1960s and early 1970s, National Urban League president Marc Morial recalled Juneteenth celebratio­ns, as well as Emancipati­on Day celebratio­ns on Jan. 1 and Watch Night parties the night before, on New Year’s Eve. ( Lincoln’s executive order took effect Jan. 1, 1863; Watch Night religious services, also called Freedom’s Eve, are celebrated on Dec. 31 in many African American churches.)

After Martin Luther King Day became a federal holiday in 1983, he said, “I noticed that people didn’t celebrate Emancipati­on Day as much.”

The current – and growing – awareness of the holiday should drive unpreceden­ted observance this year. “I think now white people understand, ‘ Damn, even when we freed them, they weren’t free’,” said Ron Busby, president of the U. S. Black Chambers Inc.

Are corporate Juneteenth recognitio­ns genuine?

Some might argue that, when you look at the demographi­cs of crowds protesting the recent string of incidents involving police brutality, companies could be making statements – and donations of millions of dollars – to simply appease consumers.

The cynicism is rooted in the lack of corporate diversity in corporate boardrooms and across many industries despite the spotlight on diversity in recent years.

According to a report from the Harvard Law School Forum on Corporate Governance, minorities held 19.5% board seats in 2018 among Fortune 100 companies.

“To be quite honest, whether it be corporatio­n or municipali­ties, people are very suspect,” said Larry Ivory, chairman of the National Black Chamber of Commerce, and president and CEO of the Illinois State Black Chamber of Commerce. “It’s not what they say, it’s what they do. They haven’t done a whole lot, not at the level they could.”

The tech industry, especially, has been criticized for a lack of inclusive hiring. Minorities at Google and other major tech companies are also sharply underrepre­sented in non- technical jobs such as sales and administra­tion, with African Americans faring noticeably worse than Hispanics, a USA TODAY analysis in 2014 revealed. According to the most recent U. S. government data released in 2016, African Americans make up 3% of employees in the top 75 tech firms in Silicon Valley, while they hold 24% of the jobs in non- tech firms.

But this feels different, Ivory says. U. S. Black Chambers president Busby agrees. “When conscienti­ous white people march in protest, then the consciousn­ess of America is shaken.” “I think what is different about this is you have got a cadre of people who are saying, we can do better than that as America and we want change.”

Time will eventually tell whether this “is a moment or a movement,” said Urban League’s Morial. “Making a statement and contributi­ng money is a checking of a box. That is not what is needed here.”

The observatio­n of Juneteenth and some funding “should not be seen as a replacemen­t or as a substitute for the efforts that need to be made to fix the policing system, reform the criminal justice system, or reform economic and education inequities in America,” he said. “That’s what is important. I don’t want anyone to read into it, ‘ We did that, we don’t have to do this’.”

Juneteenth has been recognized by 47 states and the District of Columbia as either a state holiday or ceremonial holiday, or a day of observance, according to NextGen America.

Only Hawaii, North Dakota and South Dakota have yet to take action.

Texas, the birthplace of Juneteenth, made it a state holiday in 1980. Contributi­ng: Jessica Guynn Follow USA TODAY reporter Mike Snider on Twitter: @ MikeSnider.

 ?? DYLAN BUELL/ GETTY IMAGES FOR VIBE ?? Members of a parade perform last year during the 48th Annual Juneteenth Day Festival in Milwaukee. Some companies are beginning to officially observe Juneteenth as a paid holiday for employees.
DYLAN BUELL/ GETTY IMAGES FOR VIBE Members of a parade perform last year during the 48th Annual Juneteenth Day Festival in Milwaukee. Some companies are beginning to officially observe Juneteenth as a paid holiday for employees.
 ?? ANA RAMIREZ/ USA TODAY NETWORK ?? People line the streets to watch a Juneteenth parade last year in Austin, Texas.
ANA RAMIREZ/ USA TODAY NETWORK People line the streets to watch a Juneteenth parade last year in Austin, Texas.

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