Alberto Iber and his Facebook post that caused the controversy
Alberto Iber is in hot water after took to the comments section of a
Miami Herald article on the Texas pool party to
defend the Texas officer who pulled a gun on unarmed teens:
The Miami-Dade County school district announced Wednesday that Alberto Iber had been removed as principal after going online to defend a white Texas police officer who waved a gun at black teens while responding to a call about an unruly pool party.
In a brief statement, the district said employees are required to conduct themselves, both personally and professionally, in a manner that represents the school district’s core values. The district said a replacement would be named shortly and that Iber would be reassigned to administrative duties.
As other commenters in the thread quickly noted, North Miami Senior High School, the school Iber was in charge of (until yesterday), has a
99% minority student body:
Alberto Iber
sort of, kind of apologized:
When Iber realized his comment had caused outrage, he deleted it. Iber told New Times yesterday he did not realize the comment was linked to Facebook and would show his picture, name, and title.
“I regret that I posted the comment as it apparently upset people and became newsworthy,” Iber said. “It was not my intent.”
"Sorry if people were upset" is not a true apology. And thinking his comments were anonymous does not make the situation any better. Clearly Alberto Iber didn't really have any business managing the day-to-day functions of a school with a largely black student body. And now that he's on administrative duties with the school district, perhaps he'll have time to learn more on the students he is supposed to be serving and the daily challenges they face as young black men and women.