City offices will be closed on Monday, June 19 in observance of Juneteenth.
A bill passed in the 2023 legislative session and signed by the governor establishes June 19 as a state-recognized holiday.
Monday, June 19, marks the third time Juneteenth will be observed nationwide as a federal holiday.
A commemoration of the end of slavery in the United States, Juneteenth is also called Freedom Day or Emancipation Day, and its roots date back more than 150 years. The origins of Juneteenth stem from an important date after the Civil War — June 19, 1865 — when the Union General Maj. Gen. Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston, Texas, to inform the country's last enslaved people that they had been freed under the Emancipation Proclamation. Even though the proclamation had passed years before, that day in 1865 is remembered as the effective conclusion to centuries of slavery in America.
As the Black Lives Matter movement gained renewed momentum in 2020, so did public interest in the significance of Juneteenth and calls for its recognition on a national scale. The following summer, President Joe Biden signed legislation that officially declared Juneteenth a federal holiday, which falls annually on the 19th of June.
With the law's passage, Juneteenth became the 12th federal holiday formally recognized by the U.S. government. And, while people across the country attend parades and festivals held to celebrate Juneteenth over the upcoming long weekend, a number of government agencies, including some state governments, will be closed in observance.
Banks
All non-essential federal offices will be closed on Monday, as they typically are during other federal holidays, meaning federal courts and banks will not operate as usual. State governments and related non-essential offices in places like New York, where Juneteenth is recognized as a state holiday in addition to a federal one, will close as well. Although most ATMs should remain open for normal use, the largest banks, like JP Morgan, Wells Fargo and Bank of America will not because they follow the yearly calendar set by the Federal Reserve Bank, and that complies with the national holiday schedule.
Wall Street
Neither will the stock market, which remained open during the inaugural Juneteenth federal holiday in 2021. Wall Street acknowledges the holiday this year, with NASDAQ confirming last month that the stock market will be closed to observe Juneteenth on Monday, like it was in 2022. The New York Stock Exchange will not be open for regular trading, either.
Mail and postal services
Some postal services pause operations on Monday to observe Juneteenth, but not all. The U.S. Postal Service is closed Monday, so mail sent through the carrier will not be delivered before Tuesday at the earliest, but UPS will continue to operate as usual, despite acknowledging Juneteenth on its latest annual holiday calendar. FedEx will also continue services during regular hours on Monday.
Schools
Public, and many private, schools across the country are closed Monday for the holiday, with the U.S. Department of Education confirming in an announcement earlier this month that all federal offices, most Federal Student Aid processors and contact centers would be closed. Because around half of U.S. states still do not recognize Juneteenth as a state holiday, according to Pew Research Center, school and government office closures can vary locally. In New Jersey, which passed a law declaring Juneteenth a state holiday before the federal law passed in 2021, observes Juneteenth on the third Friday of June, rather than June 19 annually. Because of this, schools, state courts and other government offices are closed there on Friday instead of Monday.
Private businesses
Many employees within the private-sector are also given Monday off from work to observe Juneteenth. Private-owned restaurants and retail venues can decide whether to remain open or not, and, although large brands like Starbucks, Nike and Target announced in previous years their decisions to recognize Juneteenth as an official company holiday, their individual stores will likely continue to operate during regular business hours.
SOURCE: CBS News