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File #: 23-1466    Version: 1 Name:
Type: ITEMS FOR INDIVIDUAL CONSIDERATION Status: Approved
File created: 5/17/2023 In control: Mayor and City Council Office
On agenda: 6/14/2023 Final action:
Title: A resolution amending Resolution No. 21-0777 to direct the City Manager to fly the Juneteenth Flag on the flagpole at City Hall (1500 Marilla) and other City operated facilities in place of the City of Dallas Official Flag from June 16 to June 19, 2023 and annually thereafter on June 19, to celebrate Juneteenth Month - Financing: No cost consideration to the City
Indexes: 100
Attachments: 1. Resolution
Date Ver.Action ByActionResultAction DetailsMeeting DetailsVideo
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STRATEGIC PRIORITY: Workforce, Education, & Equity
AGENDA DATE: June 14, 2023
COUNCIL DISTRICT(S): All
DEPARTMENT: Mayor and City Council Office
EXECUTIVE: T.C. Broadnax
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SUBJECT

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A resolution amending Resolution No. 21-0777 to direct the City Manager to fly the Juneteenth Flag on the flagpole at City Hall (1500 Marilla) and other City operated facilities in place of the City of Dallas Official Flag from June 16 to June 19, 2023 and annually thereafter on June 19, to celebrate Juneteenth Month - Financing: No cost consideration to the City

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BACKGROUND

The City of Dallas is committed to the pursuit of initiatives that promote equity and inclusion and ending discrimination, prejudice, and injustice, and further recognizing Juneteenth celebrates freedom and commemorates the end of slavery in the United States.

The Emancipation Proclamation was issued by President Abraham Lincoln effective January 1, 1863, freeing all enslaved. However, southern slave owners ignored that order. On June 19, 1865, two and a half years following the order, union soldiers arrived in Galveston, Texas to enforce the president's order.

Through other systems of oppression, such as sharecropping, Jim Crow, redlining, and mass incarceration, the exploitation of African American bodies and wealth continued past slavery and persists. Thus, affecting the physical and mental health, safety, homeownership and education of African American people.

June 19 has been celebrated in communities across the nation as Juneteenth also known as Freedom Day, Jubilee Day, Liberation Day, Emancipation Day, and Black Independence Day

Juneteenth provides an opportunity to celebrate African American heritage and honor the lives, sacrifices and contributions that are woven into the American fabric.


PRIOR ACTION/REVIEW (COUNCIL, BOARDS, COMMISSIONS)

On May 22, 2019, the City Council passed a resolution that outlines Dallas' dee...

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