TAMPA, Fla. (WFLA) — In 2021, President Joe Biden recognized Juneteenth as an official national holiday, signing a bill into law that added the day to the list of federal holidays. As a federal holiday, banks are closed and mail delivery is paused.
However, while federally recognized, not all states in the United States have officially added the day to their legally recognized public holidays. While some states celebrate Juneteenth as a paid holiday, Florida and more than 20 other states do not, though it is recognized in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
The Congressional Research Service said Juneteenth “celebrates the end of slavery in the United States,” and is also known as Emancipation Day, Freedom Day, Jubilee Day, Juneteenth Independence Day, and Black Independence Day.
President Abraham Lincoln declared all slaves free with the Emancipation Proclamation of Jan. 1, 1863. However, it wasn’t until two-and-a-half years later that all slaves in the Union were freed. On June 19, 1865, when slaves in Galveston, Texas were told they were free, two months after the Civil War’s end. It is this day that Juneteenth recognizes and celebrates.
The Pew Research Center said that while all of the states have passed resolutions recognizing the day as an observance, not all count it on their list of official public holidays.
“With the exception of Texas, all states that currently recognize the day as a public holiday commemorated Juneteenth this way years before it became an official state holiday that gives state workers a paid day off,” Pew said.
Of the states that do not currently have a legal recognition of Juneteenth as a holiday, Florida is one of 26 states that do not yet have the day on the official calendar as a paid holiday. However, The Sunshine State, along with Oklahoma and Minnesota, was among “the fist states outside Texas to commemorate Juneteenth as a day of observance in the 1990s.”
In Florida, some county commissions and city councils have declared Juneteenth a recognized holiday and have closed the offices, with one example being Hillsborough County.
According to state statutes, the state governor “may issue annually a proclamation designating June 19th as Juneteenth Day and calling on public officials, schools, private organizations, and all citizens to honor the historic significance of the day” but it is not a yearly requirement, like on other holidays.
The last states to recognize Juneteenth formally were North and South Dakota, and Hawaii, according to Pew.
The Pew Research Center compiled a list of states that have recognized Juneteenth, and when each will start recognizing it as an official, paid holiday, if not already.
State | Year First Observed | First Year Paid Holiday |
---|---|---|
Alabama | 2011 | |
Alaska | 2001 | |
Arizona | 2016 | |
Arkansas | 2005 | |
California | 2003 | |
Colorado | 2004 | 2022 |
Connecticut | 2003 | 2023 |
Delaware | 2000 | 2022 |
District of Columbia | 2003 | 2021 |
Florida | 1991 | |
Georgia | 2011 | 2022 |
Hawaii | 2021 | |
Idaho | 2001 | 2021 |
Illinois | 2003 | 2021 |
Indiana | 2010 | |
Iowa | 2002 | |
Kansas | 2007 | |
Kentucky | 2005 | |
Louisiana | 2003 | 2022 |
Maine | 2011 | 2022 |
Maryland | 2014 | 2022 |
Massachusetts | 2007 | 2021 |
Michigan | 2005 | 2022 |
Minnesota | 1996 | |
Mississippi | 2010 | |
Missouri | 2013 | 2022 |
Montana | 2017 | |
Nebraska | 2019 | 2022 |
Nevada | 2011 | |
New Hampshire | 2019 | |
New Jersey | 2004 | 2021 |
New Mexico | 2006 | 2022 |
New York | 2004 | 2020 |
North Carolina | 2007 | |
North Dakota | 2021 | |
Ohio | 2006 | 2021 |
Oklahoma | 1994 | |
Oregon | 2001 | 2022 |
Pennsylvania | 2019 | |
Rhode Island | 2012 | |
South Carolina | 2008 | |
South Dakota | 2020 | 2022 |
Tennessee | 2007 | |
Texas | 1980 | 1980 |
Utah | 2016 | 2022 |
Vermont | 2007 | |
Virginia | 2007 | 2020 |
Washington | 2007 | 2022 |
West Virginia | 2008 | 2021 |
Wisconsin | 2009 | |
Wyoming | 2003 |