Google, NFL latest to call for 
			Juneteenth commemorations
			
		 
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			 [June 13, 2020] 
			By Arriana McLymore 
			 
			NEW YORK (Reuters) - Google and the 
			National Football League have joined a growing list of U.S. private 
			sector organizations choosing to commemorate June 19th, the date 
			marking the emancipation of the last remaining slaves at the end of 
			the U.S. Civil War. 
			 
			Google, a unit of Alphabet Inc, has instructed employees to cancel 
			unnecessary meetings on "Juneteenth," according to a staff memo seen 
			by Reuters. Meanwhile, the NFL has decided to recognize the date as 
			a league holiday and will close the league office. 
			 
			The date is celebrated as African Americans' Independence Day, and 
			this year marks the 155th anniversary of the end of slavery in the 
			United States in 1865. 
			 
			Google and the NFL are the latest high-profile names from the 
			private sector to recognize Juneteenth amid a nationwide outcry over 
			racism in the United States sparked by the death of George Floyd, an 
			unarmed black man who died in police custody in Minneapolis. Others 
			include Nike Inc, Vox Media, The New York Times and several 
			tech-sector heavyweights such as Twitter Inc. 
			 
			"We encourage all Googlers to use this day to create space for 
			learning and reflection, so please don't schedule any unnecessary 
			meetings," the Google memo said. "Now, more than ever, it's 
			important for us to find moments of connection as a community." 
			 
			Google confirmed the memo, sent late Thursday. The memo applies only 
			to Google staff, not everyone in the wider Alphabet organization. 
			 
			A spokesperson for the NFL confirmed that the company would 
			recognize Juneteenth as a company holiday and that league offices 
			would be closed. 
			 
			Google told Reuters it recognized Juneteenth is an important day, 
			but rather than making it a holiday it wanted to give workers the 
			space to use the day mindfully, including if they choose by watching 
			a conversation the company's diversity team will host with musician 
			Alicia Keys. The company said it expected it to be a quiet day, 
			noting several meetings had come off calendars after the memo. 
			
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            Google stopped short of making Juneteenth a full company holiday, 
			unlike Silicon Valley peers Twitter, Lyft Inc, and Square Inc, which 
			each announced the new policies this week. 
			 
			Sources inside Google, who were not authorized to speak to the 
			media, said all their meetings have been canceled and some employees 
			who wanted the day off have been told they can use sick days rather 
			than vacation days. 
			 
			Google last year drew criticism from users for not honoring 
			Juneteenth with a "doodle," or an altered version of the company's 
			homepage logo, after artist Davian Chester offered a suggestion that 
			went viral on social media of black hands breaking apart handcuffs. 
            
			  
             
			 
			Chester said this week that he has not heard in recent days from 
			Google, which commemorates many other holidays and anniversaries 
			around the world with a special logo. "I believe they still aren't 
			going to do anything for Juneteenth but we will see," Chester said. 
			Google didn't have immediate comment. 
			 
			NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell's memo said he would like staff to 
			"reflect on our past but, more importantly, consider how each one of 
			us can continue to show up and band together to work toward a better 
			future." 
			 
			Goodell said the historical event "weighs even more heavily today in 
			the current climate." 
			 
			(Reporting by Arriana McLymore in Raleigh, North Carolina, Imani 
			Moise in New York and Paresh Dave in Oakland, California; Editing by 
			Daniel Wallis) 
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