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DESCRIPTION:6/19 SF City Hall Juneteenth Rally on Inequities of Black City 
 Workers\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/events/2341246405935013/\n\nJuneteenth 
 commemorates the June 19, 1865, announcement of the abolition of slavery in 
 Texas, and more generally the emancipation of enslaved Black folks.\nOn 
 this important day, stand with us on the steps of city hall to condemn 
 racist and discriminatory practices in City departments against Black 
 workers.\nBlack workers employed by the San Francisco government have 
 lowest wages among ethnicity groups, the highest of those fired, highest in 
 medical separations, lowest in regards to promotions, and have the lowest 
 numbers in professional classifications.\n\n\nJuneteenth commemorates the 
 June 19, 1865, announcement of the abolition of slavery in Texas, and more 
 generally the emancipation of enslaved Black folks.\n\nOn this important 
 day, stand with us on the steps of city hall to condemn racist and 
 discriminatory practices in City departments against Black 
 workers.\n\nBlack workers employed by the San Francisco government have 
 lowest wages among ethnicity groups, the highest of those fired, highest in 
 medical separations, lowest in regards to promotions, and have the lowest 
 numbers in professional classifications.\n\nBlack city workers receive 
 disciplinary dismissals at a rate 2.5 times higher than their overall 
 representation in the workforce and when looking at the highest paid 
 classifications by race, the average Black worker makes $67,000, while the 
 average white worker makes $150,000.\n\nSan Francisco has studied Black 
 folks for 54 years in 3 different reports, but has not taken action to 
 address these staggering disparities. Join us to demand action.\n\nWealth 
 and Disparities in the Black Community - Justice 4 Mario Woods advocates 
 for justice for Mario Woods and other victims of police violence. As a 
 Black-led group focused on issues affecting the Black community, we are 
 taking the opportunity to pursue justice in the workplace for Black city 
 workers, as part of our work of exposing and correcting racial disparities 
 in San Francisco.\n\n...\n	Wednesday, June 19, 2019 at 11 AM\n\n\n	City 
 Hall in San Francisco\n\n\nSTOP The Racist Terror Against City Workers! SF 
 City Workers Speak Out At BOS 
 Meeting\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IkoYXzKO_so&t=550s\n\nAfrican 
 American Workers Blast 
 Racism\nhttp://www.sfexaminer.com/african-american-workers-blast-city-racism-discrimination-hiring/\n\nRacism 
 Reigns At James Rolph 
 Park\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F-kmrjrxvF4&t=267s\nhttp://sfbayview.com/2016/05/racism-reigns-at-james-rolph-park-san-francisco/\n\nRacism, 
 Outsourcing and Retaliation At SF Civil Service Commission With HR Director 
 Micki Callahan\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AqNhPRQeHGk&t=21s\n\nJune 
 19 Should Be a National 
 Holiday\nhttps://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/06/juneteenth-emancipation-civil-war-slavery-union\nBY\nJONAH 
 WALTERS\nOn June 19, 1865, slavery ended in Texas. Juneteenth should be a 
 national holiday.\n\nAn 1865 illustration in Harper's magazine celebrating 
 Emancipation.\n\nOne hundred fifty-one years ago today, a warship landed in 
 the harbor of Galveston, Texas. Union general Gordon Granger was on board, 
 along with about two thousand Union soldiers.\n\nLater that day, Granger 
 stood on the balcony of Ashton Villa — Galveston’s most luxurious 
 mansion and a onetime Confederate military headquarters, built by slaves 
 just five years earlier. He announced the dawn of a new era, reading from 
 General Order 3, a document declaring the end of the Civil War and 
 reasserting the power of the Federal government over the soon-to-be 
 reconstructed South.\n\nBut Granger’s most important message was directed 
 not to Galveston’s cotton planters or shipping magnates, but to their 
 slaves:\n\nThe people of Texas are informed that in accordance with a 
 Proclamation from the Executive of the United States, all slaves are free. 
 This involves an absolute equality of rights and rights of property between 
 former masters and slaves…\n\nThe crowd was jubilant. Many of the 
 assembled spectators were black Texans who had been deceived about the 
 war’s progress by planters hoping to maintain control over their captive 
 workforce for one last cotton harvest.\n\nTwo and a half years after the 
 Emancipation Proclamation, slavery had finally come to an end in Texas. 
 That day — June 19, 1865 — would come to be celebrated by black 
 Americans all over the country, who remember Juneteenth as the anniversary 
 of their historic triumph over the planter class.\n\nIt should be a 
 national holiday.\n\nSlavers Can’t Hide\n\nAs antislavery sentiment grew 
 in the North, many Southern planters sought increasingly remote territories 
 in which to establish plantations. Many planters set their sights on Texas, 
 which they imagined to be further outside the Federal government’s reach 
 than the plantation states of the southeast.\n\nA pro-slavery insurrection 
 against Mexico established the Texas Republic in 1835, and Southern elites 
 seized the opportunity to add a vast new slave territory to the union, 
 pressuring the Federal government into annexing the territory in 
 1845.\n\nOnce Texas became a state, its enslaved population skyrocketed as 
 planters relocated to the region. Just five years after its annexation, the 
 enslaved population had jumped from 11,000 in 1840 to more than 58,000 in 
 1850.\n\nThis number only continued to grow as the war drew more near. On 
 the eve of the Civil War, black slaves made up more than 30 percent of the 
 Texas population. A quarter of white Texans owned slaves.\n\nPlanters 
 flocked to Texas in even greater numbers after the fighting began, bringing 
 their slaves with them. By war’s end in 1865 there were as many as a 
 quarter million slaves in the state. About one thousand of them lived in 
 Galveston, where they worked in the service of wealthy homeowners or as 
 dockhands at the port.\n\nNarratives by former slaves demonstrate the 
 brutality of life on Texas plantations — and the outrageous cruelty of 
 the Texas planters.\n\nArmstead Barrett, who was enslaved on a plantation 
 close to Huntsville, described being treated like livestock, working long 
 hours in the Texas heat only to be inspected by a doctor in the evening, 
 “like fat beef.”\n\n“Most of the time we all went naked,” he 
 recalled. “Just have on one shirt or no shirt at all.”\n\nBarrett also 
 recalled the chaos in the months before General Granger’s arrival, when 
 rumors of the Civil War’s end had begun to circulate among slaves and 
 their overseers, and plantations began to slip out of their owners’ 
 control.\n\nI know when peace was declared they [the slaves] were all 
 shoutin’. One woman was hollerin’ and a white man with a 
 high-steppin’ horse rode close to her, and I saw him get out and open his 
 knife and cut her wide across the stomach. Then he put his hat inside his 
 shirt and rode off like lightnin’. The woman was put in a wagon and I 
 never heard more ’bout her.\n\nBut sometimes the tables were turned. 
 Barrett also recalls the decapitation of one particularly abusive overseer 
 by  two slaves he tormented, who then left his severed head in their 
 master’s field as a warning to all their oppressors.\n\nWhen Union troops 
 arrived in Galveston bearing news of General Order 3, the embattled slaves 
 were confirmed as the victors in this bitter conflict over their 
 futures.\n\nThey were free to make their own way.\n\nA People On the 
 Move\n\nGeneral Granger’s announcement included a line advising the freed 
 slaves “to remain quietly in their homes and work for wages.” But many 
 former slaves — recognizing the repression and destitution they would 
 face in postbellum Texas — chose to leave, abandoning their plantations 
 to travel for the first time as free people.\n\nThe mass exodus of freed 
 slaves from Texas and other Southern states would only gain momentum over 
 the next few decades, eventually culminating in the Great Migration of the 
 twentieth century, during which as many as 6 million black Americans 
 relocated to the North and West.\n\nThe Juneteenth Day celebration traveled 
 with them.\n\nToday, Juneteenth is celebrated all over the country, with 
 cities as distant from Texas as Portland, Maine and Anchorage, Alaska 
 hosting outdoor celebrations featuring Texan barbeque and strawberry soft 
 drinks.\n\nOne of the largest Juneteenth Day celebrations outside of Texas 
 takes place in San Francisco. According to local lore, community leader and 
 Texas transplant Dr. Wesley Johnson inaugurated the tradition in 1951 by 
 donning a Stetson hat and riding a white horse down Fillmore 
 Street.\n\nMilwaukee, Minneapolis, and Tulsa are also home to especially 
 strong Juneteenth traditions, joining communities all over the country in 
 celebrating the holiday with parades and street festivals.\n\nBut despite 
 these widespread celebrations — not to mention the monumental historical 
 importance of June 19, 1865 — Juneteenth Day still isn’t a national 
 holiday.\n\nA Day Free From Work\n\nEarly Juneteenth celebrations were 
 often disrupted by gangs of white supremacists, who objected to poor black 
 laborers — many of whom were still tied to the land as sharecroppers — 
 excusing themselves from a day of work to celebrate their liberation.\n\nIn 
 Texas, the years following General Granger’s announcement were 
 characterized by a violent counterrevolution — between 1865 and 1868, 
 more than four hundred freedmen were murdered by white settlers, and a 
 delegate to the all-white constitutional convention in 1866 characterized 
 “the permanent preservation of the white race” as “the paramount 
 object of the people of Texas.”\n\nSome municipalities even banned the 
 holiday altogether, prohibiting black citizens from congregating in public 
 places like parks. Most Juneteenth Day celebrations took place secretly in 
 fields far outside of town or in the privacy of black churches.\n\nIn 1980, 
 Texas lawmakers voted to officially designate June 19 a state holiday. 
 Today, forty-five other states have similar laws on the books, recognizing 
 Juneteenth as a day of observance, if not a bona fide holiday.\n\nBut the 
 Federal government still hasn’t established Juneteenth Day as a national 
 day of celebration, despite a longstanding campaign advocating that status. 
 Such an act is long overdue.\n\nStill, black Americans all over the country 
 will come together today to mark the occasion. Some, like Paul Herring of 
 Flint Michigan, note that the federal government seems more willing to 
 acknowledge a day commemorating black tragedy — the assassination of 
 Martin Luther King, Jr — than a day celebrating black freedom.\n\n”When 
 I think of Martin, I can’t help but see the dogs and the sticks and the 
 little girls in the church,” he told the New York Times in 2004. ”But 
 when I think of Juneteenth, I see an old codger kicking up his heels and 
 running down the road to tell everyone the happy news.”\n\n”This is our 
 day to be happy,” he said. ”I’m glad as hell that the US got its 
 freedom on July Fourth, but were my ancestors free that day? I don’t 
 think so.”\n\nThe abolitionist triumph over the planter class stands 
 among the world’s most significant victories against 
 oppression.\n\nToday, we celebrate the end of slavery in America and 
 remember that, through struggle, a better world is possible.\n\nJune 19 
 Should Be a National 
 Holiday\nhttps://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/06/juneteenth-emancipation-civil-war-slavery-union\nBY\nJONAH 
 WALTERS\nOn June 19, 1865, slavery ended in Texas. Juneteenth should be a 
 national holiday.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/06/09/18823809.php
SUMMARY:SF City Hall Juneteenth Rally on Inequities of Black City Workers
LOCATION:San Francisco City Hall\nPolk and McAllister St.\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/06/09/18823809.php
DTSTART:20190619T190000Z
DTEND:20190619T200000Z
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