Thousands of Hennepin County employees are closer to getting paid time off to mark the holiday that celebrates the emancipation of enslaved people.
A Hennepin County committee voted unanimously Tuesday to give full holiday status to Juneteenth, a move that comes as the city of Minneapolis considers a similar action.
"This one here is pretty important to Hennepin County as a whole," said Commissioner Angela Conley, who sponsored the designation along with Commissioner Irene Fernando.
In the racial reckoning that followed the murder of George Floyd last Memorial Day, public and private employers have begun honoring June 19, which is also known as Freedom Day.
The day also celebrates "the triumphs, culture and achievements of African Americans locally and across the United States," their proposal said.
The vote came in a committee so the decision won't be official until the full board vote next Tuesday. But all seven board members sit on the committee so it is expected to easily pass.
The action comes less than a year after the county declined to give Juneteenth full holiday status. Last August, the board added a new floating holiday, which would have allowed employees to take June 19 off, but removed Christmas Eve as a paid holiday.
With the addition of Juneteenth, the county's 8,000 employees will have 11 declared and one floating holiday. They previously had 10 designated holidays and one floating holiday.