Recognizing Juneteenth and Strengthening Company Culture: Tips for Employers

Several prominent companies across the nation recently announced that they would observe Juneteenth as a holiday. This new trend of observing Juneteenth comes in the wake of several weeks of protests across the world advocating for an end to racial injustice and police brutality. These protests have generated discourse across the country, including in workplaces, about systemic racism and what actions we all can take to address the issues. Although Juneteenth is not a new holiday, recognizing and observing the holiday is one of many proactive measures that employers can take to demonstrate their commitment to fostering diverse and inclusive workplaces and to promoting racial justice.

What Is Juneteenth?

Juneteenth is the oldest nationally celebrated commemoration of the end of legal slavery in the United States. Although the Emancipation Proclamation was issued on January 1, 1863, the news did not reach enslaved Black people in Galveston, Texas, until June 19, 1865, where it was met with shock and jubilation.

The newly-freed people in Galveston celebrated after the announcement, and the following year, freedmen and freedwomen organized the first of what became the annual celebration of “Jubilee Day” on June 19 in Texas. Over time, the annual celebration spread from the Black community in Texas to the rest of the United States. Juneteenth celebrations focus on education, history, self-improvement, culture, and pride.

Who Is Observing Juneteenth?

Many companies have announced they will make Juneteenth an annual corporate holiday. The decision to observe Juneteenth in the workplace comes as more employers voice their support for racial justice. Other companies have also announced donations to organizations promoting racial justice.

How Can Employers Observe the Holiday?

Give employees a paid day off.

Consider observing Juneteenth as a company holiday and giving employees a paid day off as the company would for other observed holidays. This can help remind employees that the employer believes that the history of all its employees matters and that it is taking an active stand to promote racial justice.

If closing to observe Juneteenth is not a viable option for a company, they may want to consider alternatives. For example, some companies plan to remain open and give full-time non-exempt workers the option of taking the day off with full pay or working the day with time-and-one-half pay.

Honor Juneteenth in the workplace.

Recognizing Juneteenth in the workplace can strengthen a company’s commitments to its mission, vision, and values to promote a diverse and inclusive workplace and to foster social and racial justice.

There are many ways that employers can commemorate Juneteeth in the workplace:

  • Invite guest speakers to the workplace to speak on current issues;
  • Sponsor relevant workplace activities (on-duty and off-duty); or
  • Engage in the same kinds of activities that the company engages in for other commemorations for people of color.

Participate in local Juneteenth events.

Many communities across the country host Juneteenth celebrations. These events include parades, rodeos, cookouts, live concerts, and community outdoor activities. Consider hosting a company-sponsored booth or contest in these community events.

Is Juneteenth an Observed Holiday?

Juneteenth is an observed holiday in 47 states and the District of Columbia, but it is not a mandated federal holiday. Texas was the first state to recognize Juneteenth as a state holiday in 1980. A more comprehensive history of Juneteenth can be found here.


© 2020, Ogletree, Deakins, Nash, Smoak & Stewart, P.C., All Rights Reserved.

Quick Q&A: Handling Holiday During COVID-19

As employees settle into working from home, it is important for employers to consider their approach to annual leave while the COVID-19 crisis is ongoing. Regular rest breaks help to ensure the physical and mental wellbeing of employees during a stressful period with additional work, health and family pressures. It is also important from a business continuity perspective to ensure that employees do not return work with a significant amount of holiday outstanding. With this in mind, Katten looks at common queries that have come up recently regarding holiday accrual and pay.

Does holiday entitlement continue to accrue while staff are furloughed, laid off or on short-time working?

Yes, employees continue to accrue holiday as they remain employees of the company. If an employee is entitled to more than the statutory minimum amount of 28 days’ paid holiday (inclusive of bank and public holidays) then you can, by agreement, negotiate a reduction in their contractual entitlement provided that doesn’t go below the statutory minimum.

Can I ask staff to take holiday at a specific time?

Yes, employees can be required to take holiday at a specific time, provided they are given notice of at least twice the length of the period of leave that they are being required to take (e.g., for a five day holiday they would need to be given 10 days’ notice). We would recommend that employees continue to record their holiday in your usual holiday tracker system. You can ask an employee to take holiday regardless of whether it has already been accrued.

How much should I pay staff who take holiday while furloughed?

While the guidance is not clear cut, we expect that holiday pay will be payable at an employee’s reduced furloughed rate of salary for any holiday taken while furloughed. This will be reimbursable as salary up to the Her Majesty’s Revenue & Customs (HMRC) limits under the coronavirus job retention scheme.

Can staff carry over accrued but untaken holiday?

The UK Government has amended the Working Time Regulations so that employees and workers can carry over up to 4 weeks’ paid holiday over a 2-year period, if it was not reasonably practicable to take the leave due to the coronavirus. This is a change from the current position where the ‘basic holiday’ of 4 weeks must be taken each year as a health and safety measure, meaning that it was only previously possible to carry over the balance of holiday above 20 days (which in the UK would be a minimum of 8 days). So in practice, employees can now carry forward 4 weeks as a matter of law. We recommend considering the impact of holiday accrual on the business when things return to ‘normal’ (i.e., employers should consider whether they want to require employees to take holiday even while they are furloughed).

Can I force employees to cancel a booked holiday?

Employers are still able to refuse an employee permission to take holiday on particular days (e.g., if they are critical to the business at this time and the employer needs them at work), provided that they give notice to the employee which is at least as long as the holiday requested. However, the law has changed to say that employers can only exercise this right where there is “good reason to do so”.

©2020 Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP
For more employment considerations during the COVID-19 pandemic, see the National Law Review Labor & Employment law page.

Paid Sick Leave Spreads Throughout New Jersey

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While the New Jersey Senate and Assembly continue to debate state-wide sick leave laws, four more New Jersey municipalities have enacted mandatory sick leave laws for private employers.  Effective January 2015, East Orange, Paterson, Irvington and Passaic will join Newark and Jersey City in requiring paid sick time for employees.

Under the recently passed ordinances of those municipalities, most employees of private employers who work a total of 80 hours or more in a covered municipality will accrue at least one hour of paid sick time for every 30 hours worked.  For employees who are exempt from the overtime requirements of the Fair Labor Standards Act, employers should assume a 40 hour workweek, unless the employee’s normal workweek is less than 40 hours.  If the exempt employee’s normal workweek is less than 40 hours, accrual may be based on the employee’s normal workweek.

Employees who work for employers with 10 or more employees in the municipality may accrue up to 40 hours of paid sick time in a calendar year, while employees who work for employers with less than 10 employees in the municipality may accrue up to 24 hours of paid sick time per calendar year, with some exceptions.  For example, home health care workers and food service workers may accrue up to 40 hours per calendar year regardless of the size of the employer.

Paid sick time accrual begins upon the effective date of the applicable ordinance and thereafter upon the date of hire.  However, accrued time may not be used until after the 90th calendar day of employment.  After 90 calendar days of employment, employees must be permitted to use accrued sick time for several reasons including:

  • To care for their own or a family member’s sickness, need for medical diagnosis, care or treatment of a sickness, or need for preventative medical care; or

  • Due to a forced closing of the employee’s place of business or to care for a child whose school or place of care has a forced closing, or to care for a family member when a health authority or a health care provider has determined that the family member’s exposure to a communicable disease would jeopardize the health of other’s in the community.

The ordinances allow an employer to require reasonable advance notice where the leave is foreseeable and as soon as practicable where it is not.  The ordinances also permit an employer to request that the employee confirm in writing that the time was used for a permissible purpose, and where the employee has been out for three or more consecutive days, the employer may request reasonable supporting documentation from a health care professional.  An employer may not, however, require that the documentation explain the nature of the illness.  To the extent any health information is disclosed, such information must be treated as confidential and only disclosed to the affected employee or with the affected employee’s permission.

Once accrued, up to 40 hours of paid sick time may be carried over into the next calendar year.  An employer may, however, elect to pay its employees for unused sick time at the end of the calendar year in lieu of carry over.  Note that even where an employee does carry over accrued paid sick time, an employer is not required to permit the employee to take more than 40 hours of paid sick time in a calendar year.  The “calendar year” may be defined by the employer as any regular consecutive 12-month period.

Employers who already have paid time off policies that provide sufficient paid time to satisfy the total annual accrual requirements of the applicable ordinance, and permit such paid time off to be used for the same purposes identified in the ordinance, are not required to provide additional paid time.  Employers should be mindful, however, that if their current policy only provides paid time off to full-time employees, either their policy should be modified to extend such paid time off to all employees who work more than 80 hours in a covered municipality or a separate policy should be implemented for part-time and temporary employees that satisfies the minimum requirements of any applicable ordinance.

While none of the ordinances require an employer to pay employees for accrued but unused sick time upon separation, if an employee is rehired within six months, any accrued but unused sick time must be reinstated.  Likewise, if an employee is transferred within the municipality the employee retains any unused sick time.

Each of the ordinances provide expansive protections against retaliation and require employers to provide individual employees with notice of their rights under the law.  Notice to individual employees must be in English and in the employee’s primary language, provided the employee’s primary language is the primary language of at least 10% of the employer’s workforce.  Employers are also required to display a poster in a conspicuous and accessible place in each covered business establishment.  In addition, employers must maintain records documenting their compliance with the applicable ordinance.

Failure to comply with these ordinances may result in fines, civil penalties, or a private action by a current or former employee.  As such, employers in the covered municipalities should familiarize themselves with the applicable ordinances and take steps to ensure compliance.

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Flextime Consideration Is Now Law In Some Places

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The pros and cons of implementing “flextime” policies have long been debated. Two laws – one state and one municipal – went into effect at the beginning of this year, however, that made it mandatory for some employers in those jurisdictions to consider flexible working arrangements for their eligible employees.

Vermont passed a “flexible working arrangements” law, which grants employees the right to request a flexible working arrangement for any reason and requires employers to discuss and consider such requests at least twice per calendar year. “Flexible working arrangement” is defined to including changes in the number of days or hours worked, changes in the employee’s start or stop time, work from home, or job-sharing. The law identifies several factors the employer may consider in choosing to grant or deny the request, including costs, effect on employee morale, ability to meet demand, and effect on schedules and staff.

San Francisco passed the “Family Friendly Workplace Ordinance,” which applies to employers with 20 or more employees. It grants certain employees with caregiving responsibilities the right to request  a schedule, location, or assignment change in order to care for children, persons with a serious health condition with whom the employee is in a family relationship, or parents who are 65 or older. Employers must meet with the employee within 21 days of the request and provide a written response. In the case of a denial, the employer must set out a bona fide business reason for the denial.

These laws require conversations that many companies have already been having with their employees. If flextime arrangements are something your company is considering, it is important to remember that such policies require very careful drafting and execution. For example, policies should explain the jobs for which flextime arrangements are and are not possible to avoid potential discrimination claims. Further, FLSA considerations such as overtime and exempt/non-exempt distinctions must be kept in mind when rearranging schedules and tracking hours. Workers’ compensation claims from telecommuting employees injured at home will also require special attention.

Vermont’s law can be found here. More information and a link to the San Francisco ordinance is here.

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The Christmas Conundrum Re: Employee Time Off

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The holidays are a joyous time of year, but many employers face the season with a certain sense of trepidation as their employees inevitably request time off work.  As the holiday season kicks into full gear, now is a good time for employers to refresh themselves on basic guidelines for granting and denying employees’ vacation requests.

As a starting point, the availability of time off is typically dependent on a number of factors, including the employer’s formal policies, employment contracts, or a collective bargaining agreement. While there are no express state or federal laws requiring private employers to provide time off to celebrate holidays like Christmas, Hanukkah or Kwanzaa, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 does require employers to ”reasonably accommodate” an employee’s religious practices, so long as it does not impose an “undue hardship” on the employer. Allowing an employee time off to observe a recognized religious holiday is normally a reasonable accommodation that should be made, if requested, without an undue burden.

Although some employers voluntarily reward employees with at least some time off during the holidays, employers must be careful to recognize that some employees may observe holidays that are not reflected in the employer’s office calendar. For example, if employees are given time off for Christmas day but not for Ramadan, employees observing the Muslim holiday may claim discrimination. Such situations can typically be avoided by utilizing “floating holidays” which allow time off for religious days that do not appear on a company’s official schedule. In addition, employers can include in the company policy that any holiday not appearing on the calendar can be requested and granted subject to review.

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W. Chapman Hopkins

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McBrayer, McGinnis, Leslie and Kirkland, PLLC