Hartford Courant

Hartford City Council OKS Juneteenth as city holiday

June 19 to be recognized as day commemorat­ing emancipati­on of slaves

- By Ted Glanzer Hartford Courant

HARTFORD — The Hartford City Council on Monday evening approved a resolution recognizin­g June 19 annually as “Juneteenth Independen­ce Day” and making it a legal holiday.

“Juneteenth is the oldest annual holiday commemorat­ing the emancipati­on of enslaved people in the United States and has been celebrated by African Americans since the late 1800s,” the resolution says.

Juneteenth marks the day enslaved people in Texas learned of their emancipati­on in 1865. Interest in the holiday intensifie­d

it seems important that it is fully staffed. That’s all we’re doing tonight. So in the first place I don’t really understand why one would abstain from voting when if you’re desirous of having the commission be an effective commission, it should have the full complement.”

Gale said the charter revision commission had been completely transparen­t, and, instead, called the members’ stepping aside a “somewhat of a peevish” maneuver.

“I don’t think that’s how a deliberati­ve body should be operative,” Gale said. “I can only imagine the tensions that were involved between the states in 1787, when the Constituti­onal Convention was meeting in Philadelph­ia. You had slaveholde­rs and anti-slaveholde­rs and they were trying to come together and work on a document that everyone could agree on. They had bitter fights. But nobody walked out. …

“It is your prerogativ­e to walk out, but I don’t think it advances your cause. Stay and argue your point. We’ve been meeting for a year now. Everyone has had a year to argue their points. The fact that they didn’t carry the day, that’s democracy. You have to move on.”

Michtom, however, noted that representa­tives from Connecticu­t, Delaware, New Jersey and New York threatened to walk out of the Constituti­onal Convention if they did not have equal representa­tion in what’s now the U.S. Senate.

“That’s how that deal got done,” Michtom said. “So, sometimes, you do when you see the thing not working right, when you see meetings happening outside of the main body of the thing, and at least what’s alleged is maybe the mustering of votes and the changing of agendas to make things go a certain way, I think it is worth walking away and that’s worth saying.”

That the four Black members of the charter revision commission stepped aside from their duties is worth paying attention to, Michtom said.

“[T]he fact of the matter is the commission is in some little bit of turmoil, let us say,” he said, adding that he, too, was not commenting on Yazbak or his credential­s. “We can talk about who is right and who is wrong, but in this city something happened that caused all the Black members of the commission to walk away. These are folks with a long history of civic life; I think they take their roles seriously. That needs to be addressed by the folks who didn’t walk away. And this is the only opportunit­y I think we as council have to comment on [this], at least until the commission’s recommenda­tions come back to us for a vote.”

Clarke, speaking a second time, urged his colleagues to speak to the commission­ers who stepped aside in protest.

“These are some of the most astute, intelligen­t people that reside in the city … that we have charged to be on this body,” he said. “There is a reason why they decided to boycott/protest. And I want us to speak to them regarding the fact of why they chose to do so. They didn’t do it just because they didn’t get their way. They did it because of a reason and by things that had been discussed that they felt there was some level of injustice that has taken place.”

Councilman James Sanchez said he supported Yazbak’s appointmen­t to ensure the charter revision commission continued its work.

“This is a seat that has become vacant and only because of the person relocating, nothing more, nothing less,” Sanchez said. “And it is our responsibi­lity to make sure this commission is fully staffed. This is why I’m supporting the appointmen­t of Peter Yazbak. He’s a great person. He’s a levelheade­d Hartford resident, always serving the community.

“I just feel that it is our responsibi­lity to support this commission by making sure it is filled with the staffing that is required. If the other [six] still do not want to be part of this commission, we need to fill those seats immediatel­y and move on. Because it’s not about me, it’s not about us, it’s about Hartford residents and our constituen­ts, our families and our friends.”

Ultimately, the council approved Yazbak’s appointmen­t 5-0, with the three abstention­s. City Council President Maly Rosado, Gale, Sanchez, Councilman Nick Lebron and Assistant Majority Leader Marilyn Rossetti voted to appoint Yazbak. Councilwom­an Shirley Surgeon was not present at the meeting.

 ?? COURANT FILE ?? Protesters hold a Juneteenth rally June, 19, 2020, at the state Capitol against racial injustice and police brutality. The Hartford City Council on Monday approved a resolution recognizin­g Juneteenth as a city holiday.
COURANT FILE Protesters hold a Juneteenth rally June, 19, 2020, at the state Capitol against racial injustice and police brutality. The Hartford City Council on Monday approved a resolution recognizin­g Juneteenth as a city holiday.

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