Port Angeles City Council recognizes Juneteenth

PORT ANGELES — A unanimous Port Angeles City Council has voted to recognize today as Juneteenth.

The council on Tuesday passed a proclamation recognizing June 19 as Juneteenth, which celebrates the freeing of slaves in 1865. The council directed staff to draft an ordinance adding Juneteenth and Indigenous Peoples Day to the municipal code.

“I think this is long overdue,” Council Member Mike French said in the Tuesday meeting.

Mayor Kate Dexter opened the meeting by reading the Juneteenth proclamation into the record.

The unofficial holiday, which is also known as Freedom Day, Emancipation Day or Jubilee Day, commemorates June 19, 1865, when news of the Emancipation Proclamation reached Texas, the city proclamation reads.

No city-sponsored Juneteenth events are planned in Port Angeles today.

In Port Townsend, a Black Lives Matter mural is being created on Water Street before a Juneteenth celebration planned by the Jefferson County chapter of Black Lives Matter at 11 a.m. today.

The Freedom March will begin at Pope Marine Park. After hearing from speakers, the group will begin marching at 11:45 a.m. to the intersection of Haines Place and Sims Way for a protest rally.

The Port Angeles Juneteenth proclamation acknowledges that “implicit and institutional bias and discrimination exists in aspects of society: criminal justice, education, housing, health care, finance and more.”

“As a city, we will work in concert with policymakers and others to make systemic improvements with the goal to eliminate the implicit and institutional biases and barriers that inhibit every person’s success,” the Port Angeles proclamation reads.

“Whereas, it is necessary for all of us to educate ourselves about any inequities and violence that continues in our society and to take action to make clear inequities and violence against any ethnic, religious, racial or cultural group is antithetical to our core values and mission and must not be tolerated.”

The Port Angeles proclamation affirms that the city “stands in condemning racism and violence and pledges to support actions that seek a dismantled systemic inequity and bias, confront hate and violence and more fully practice the city’s statement of values toward all in our community.”

As a follow-up to the proclamation, Council member Lindsey Schromen-Wawrin suggested that Juneteenth be added to the city’s municipal code.

“I would like to recommend that we also do that with Indigenous Peoples Day, the second Monday of October,” Dexter said.

“The idea being that we would bring it back to the July 7 meeting to start the process of an ordinance adoption.”

In 2018, the Port Angeles City Council voted to honor Native Americans and their cultures by proclaiming the second Monday in October as Indigenous Peoples Day.

This year’s Indigenous Peoples Day is Oct. 12.

Dexter said she would confer with Frances Charles, chair of the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe, before the next council meeting on the Indigenous Peoples Day and Juneteenth ordinances.

“If they would like to have it be a separate process, then we can honor that moving forward,” Dexter said.

French said he spoke about Juneteenth in a June 19, 2018 council meeting and was pleased to see the holiday return to the council dais.

“It’s great to see two years later us actually making some process towards really recognizing this holiday,” French said.

“I’m interested to see that ordinance, and hopefully to follow it up with legislative agenda-making, discussing this with our state and federal legislators because this is a holiday that deserves to be a national holiday.

“This is part of the education process by which I think that we can start to heal some of our national wounds around these issues,” French added.

“So I fully endorse this.”

________

Reporter Rob Ollikainen can be reached at rollikainen@peninsula dailynews.com.

More in News

Christopher Thomsen, portraying Santa Claus, holds a corgi mix named Lizzie on Saturday at the Airport Garden Center in Port Angeles. All proceeds from the event were donated to the Peninsula Friends of Animals. (Dave Logan/for Peninsula Daily News)
Santa Paws

Christopher Thomsen, portraying Santa Claus, holds a corgi mix named Lizzie on… Continue reading

Peninsula lawmakers await budget

Gov. Ferguson to release supplemental plan this month

Clallam County looks to pass deficit budget

Agency sees about 7 percent rise over 2025 in expenditures

Officer testifies bullet lodged in car’s pillar

Witness says she heard gunfire at Port Angeles park

A copper rockfish caught as part of a state Department of Fish and Wildlife study in 2017. The distended eyes resulted from a pressure change as the fish was pulled up from a depth of 250 feet. (David B. Williams)
Author to highlight history of Puget Sound

Talk at PT Library to cover naming, battles, tribes

Vern Frykholm, who has made more than 500 appearances as George Washington since 2012, visits with Dave Spencer. Frykholm and 10 members of the New Dungeness Chapter, NSDAR, visited with about 30 veterans on Nov. 8, just ahead of Veterans Day. (New Dungeness Chapter DAR)
New Dungeness DAR visits veterans at senior facilities

Members of the New Dungeness Chapter, National Society Daughters of… Continue reading

Festival of Trees contest.
Contest: Vote for your favorite tree online

Olympic Medical Center Foundation’s Festival of Trees event goes through Dec. 25

“Angel” Alleacya Boulia, 26, of St. Louis, Mo., was last seen shopping in Port Angeles on Nov. 17, National Park Service officials said. Her rented vehicle was located Sunday at the Sol Duc trailhead in Olympic National Park. (National Park Service)
National Park Service asks for help in locating missing woman

Rented vehicle located Sunday at Sol Duc trailhead

Kendra Russo of Found and Foraged Fibers in Anacortes holds a mirror as Jayne Johnson of Sequim tries on a skirt during a craft fair on Saturday in Uptown Port Townsend. (Steve Mullensky/for Peninsula Daily News)
Mirror image

Kendra Russo of Found and Foraged Fibers in Anacortes holds a mirror… Continue reading

Flu cases rising on Peninsula

COVID-19, RSV low, health official says

Clallam board approves levy amounts for taxing districts

Board hears requests for federal funding, report on weed control

Jury selected in trial for attempted murder

Man allegedly shot car with 2 people inside