HomeMy WebLinkAboutPROCLAMATION re JuneteenthJEFFERSON COUNTY
BOARD OF COUNTY COMMISSIONERS
AGENDA REQUEST
TO: Board of County Commissioners
FROM: Adiel McKnight, Executive Assistant
DATE: June 12, 2023
SUBJECT: PROCLAMATION re: Proclaiming June 19, 2023 as Juneteenth, a
Holiday Commemorating the End of Slavery in the United States
STATEMENT OF ISSUE:
Juneteenth is a holiday celebrating the emancipation of those who had been enslaved in the United States.
Juneteenth is now celebrated annually on June 19 throughout the United States, and became an official
Washington State holiday in 2021. It is commemorated on the anniversary date of June 19, 1865, two and a
half years after the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation, when Union soldiers arrived in Galveston,
Texas and proclaimed the last remaining slaves in the United States to be freed. While emancipation is
celebrated on this day, the institution of slavery was still legal and existed in the Union border states until
the ratification of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States on December 6, 1865, which
abolished legal slavery in the U.S.
ANALYSIS:
The Washington State Legislature, in April 2021, passed a bill making Juneteenth an official, paid state
holiday.
RECOMMENDATION:
Read and pass the Juneteenth Proclamation in recognition of our nation's history and as a re -commitment to
identifying where racism persists and work to confront injustice in Jefferson County.
Mark McCauley,
PROCLAMATION
Whereas, on June 19`j', 1865, two and a half years after the signing of the Emancipation
Proclamation, Union soldiers arrived in Galveston, Texas and proclaimed the last remaining slaves
in the United States to be freed; and,
Whereas, this day marks the emancipation of all slaves, the institution of slavery was still
legal and existed in the Union border states until the ratification of the 13th Amendment to the
Constitution of the United States on December 6, 1865, which abolished slavery entirely in all of the
U.S. states and territories; and,
Whereas, since 1866, Juneteenth has been widely celebrated with cultural festivities to mark
the end of a defining and painful era in US history; and,
Whereas, millions of enslaved Africans were brought to North America where they were
tortured and endured unthinkable tragedies, resulting in trauma that has endured through
generations; and,
Whereas, freed slaves and their kin faced discrimination in nearly every aspect of life after
emancipation, including access to housing, equal pay, the ability to vote, freedom to attend public
schools, access to banking and land purchase, to name only a few; and,
Whereas, the wealth and economy of the United States was built on the backs of enslaved
people and on the land of Indigenous peoples, the economic legacy of American racism has resulted
in intractable poverty due to lack of access to higher education, low rates of home ownership, and
lack of investment in African American and other disadvantaged communities to this day. This
systemic economic discrimination has prevented the attainment of prosperity, an American ideal, for
generations; and,
Whereas, systemic racism is evident in the criminal justice system, where for hundreds of
years African Americans have far too often been unfairly profiled as offenders, denied access to due
process and justice, given longer sentences than their white counterparts, and occupy a
disproportionate share of death at the hands of law enforcement, jails, prisons and death row; and,
Whereas, Jefferson County has, like most Counties, a history of racism dating from its
inception as a result of the United States of America colonizing the land of the indigenous peoples
who had stewarded these lands and waters from time immemorial- the Sklallam, Chimacum,
Twanoh, Skokomish, Makah, Hoh, Quileute, Ozette, Suquamish, Quinault and others; and,
Whereas, racism lives on to this day across the Olympic Peninsula from overt acts like the
predatory stopping and detaining of immigrants, to the more subtle judgments and biases felt by
black, indigenous and other people of color every day; and,
Whereas, many residents of Jefferson County and the United States are calling for reforming
of systems that perpetuate the ongoing injustice and economic disparity that have defined our
country for far too long, largely based on the color of one's skin; and,
Whereas, in April, 2021 the Washington State Legislature passed a bill making Juneteenth an
official state holiday.
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOL VED THAT the Jefferson County Board of County
Commissioners, joins 49 states and countless jurisdictions in proclaiming June 19, 2023 to be
Juneteenth, a holiday celebrating African American liberation
in Jefferson County, and call for all residents to:
• Honor the culture and contributions that African Americans make to the fabric of our
society and communities;
• Learn about and acknowledge the history and legacy of racism in the United States,
• Recognize that confronting racism is an American act in our country's foundational
aspirations to form a pluralistic democracy and a more perfect union,
• Identify the ways that racism persists in perpetuating poverty and violence,
• Take personal responsibility to call out privilege and bias in ourselves, our
communities and our institutions, and
• Recommit ourselves to achieving the American ideal of equality for all, and
recognition that until Black Lives Matter, we have fallen short of that promise.
APPROVED this 121" day of June, 2023.
SEAL: JEFFERSON COUNTY
BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
Greg Brotherton, Chair
ATTEST: Kate Dean, Member
Carolyn Gallaway, CMC
Clerk of the Board Heidi Eisenhour, Member