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Flags Ordered to Half-Staff for Memorial Day

Flags Ordered to Half-Staff for Memorial Day
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By West Kentucky Star Staff
May. 22, 2020
By West Kentucky Star Staff May. 22, 2020 | 03:08 PM
U.S. government buildings, military posts and embassies will fly the flag at half-staff through Memorial Day weekend in memory of the nearly 100,000 people who have died of COVID-19, President Trump announced Thursday night in coordination with Democratic leaders. 

"I will be lowering the flags on all Federal Buildings and National Monuments to half-staff over the next three days in memory of the Americans we have lost to the coronavirus," Trump said via Twitter.

Flags will be lowered through Sunday's sunset. Trump added that flags will again be flown at half-staff on Monday morning to honor the men and women who died while serving in the U.S. military.

The national flag is dropped to half its normal height at times when the nation is in mourning or after a national tragedy. The U.S. is currently in the throes of a pandemic that has killed about 95,000 people in the country and derailed normal life for millions of people.

Earlier this month, the governors of several hard-hit states ordered their public buildings to fly flags at half-staff, including New York, Massachusetts and Colorado. In Kentucky, Governor Beshear issued a similar proclamation this week.

The procedure for flying a U.S. flag at half-staff or at half-mast calls for it to be raised briefly to its full peak, then lowered halfway. The process is reversed when lowering the flag at the end of the day — except for Memorial Day, when the display is shortened.

"On Memorial Day the flag should be displayed at half-staff until noon only, then raised to the top of the staff," according to Title 4 of the U.S. Code regarding the flag and its protocols.
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