Who gets paid time off to celebrate Juneteenth in the years to come will be uneven and complicated, if history is any guide.
Why it matters: Corporate America hasn't grappled with a new federal holiday since Martin Luther King Jr. Day was authorized almost 40 years ago. How they responded took years to evolve.
- To this day, it's among those not universally recognized as a paid day off for corporate employees — not to mention for hourly workers.
What's happening: Bank of America, JPMorgan and Wells Fargo are offering a "floating" paid holiday this year — and starting in 2022, it will be part of its holiday schedule.
- Morgan Stanley told its employees it could "step away from work at midday" today, Bloomberg reports.
- Nike says it will close all of its distribution centers and retail stores tomorrow, but stores like Target and JCPenney will be open. Starbucks will pay hourly workers time-and-a-half tomorrow, as it did last year.
Catch up quick: Juneteenth has been informally celebrated since 1865 — when the last enslaved people finally got word of their freedom — but corporate America began acknowledging the day just last year, weeks after George Floyd's murder.
- Over 800 companies are now giving employees paid time off, up from roughly 500 last year, according to Hella Creative — a group that's been petitioning corporations to acknowledge the day.
What to watch: One area where the observance of federal holidays is most inconsistent is stock exchanges — the cornerstone of financial markets....
- There's no hard-and-fast rule for when