Ala. county passes Obama holiday

Associated Press

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Marion, Ala. —- In central Alabama’s Perry County, government workers already get a day off for President’s Day, Martin Luther King Day and Veterans Day. In 2009, they’ll get one more: “Barack Obama Day.”

The rural county, which overwhelmingly supported Obama in last month’s presidential election, has approved the second Monday in November as “The Barack Obama Day.”

Sponsoring Commissioner Albert Turner Jr. said the holiday is meant to highlight the Democratic president-elect’s victory as a way to give people faith that difficult goals can be achieved.

Perry County has 12,000 residents, most of them black. Voters there backed Obama by more than 70 percent in a state that gave 60 percent of its overall vote to Republican John McCain.

The Perry County Commission’s three black members and one of its two white members voted for the Obama holiday.

Commissioner Brett Harrison said Wednesday he voted against the resolution because of the costs to the county, which has a $2.2 million annual payroll and is one of the poorest in the state. He said closing the courthouse would also idle some state employees.

“I’m a Democrat, but just in these financial times, it’s not using the county’s money wisely,” Harrison said Wednesday. “The recognition is certainly well-founded.”


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