The Mercury News

Berkeley officials call out viral teacher video as ‘harassment’

- By Angela Ruggiero aruggiero@ bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact Angela Ruggiero at 510-293-2469.

BERKELEY >> Public officials are calling out a video shared online of the teachers union president dropping his child off at a school as “stalking” and “harassment.”

The anonymous group “Guerilla Momz” followed the president of the Berkeley Teachers Federation, Matt Meyer, and filmed him dropping off his 2-year-old child at a private preschool. The video, which has more than 200,000 views on Youtube, sparked controvers­y, some calling Meyer a “hypocrite” as the union has opposed returning to Berkeley school until educators are vaccinated.

Berkeley Mayor Jesse Arreguin issued a statement Tuesday, posting it on his Twitter page, saying: “Now is not a time for conflict and division. We all have the same goal and want what is best for our children.”

“Stalking the President of the Berkeley Teachers Federation and his young child unnecessar­ily stokes divisions and creates polarizati­on at a time when we need unity,” the mayor said.

Superinten­dent Brent Stephens also issued a statement to the community, saying the video was an invasion of privacy.

“Looking to what’s ahead of us, in these last weeks before we reopen, nothing is served by treating members of our community, including our teachers — and the teacher who represents them as their union president — as the enemy,” Stephens said. “We compromise our collective wellbeing if we don’t respect one another and treat each other with compassion.”

School board trustees also weighed in, issuing their own statements on Twitter.

“I was dishearten­ed to hear about the recent harassment of the President of the Berkeley Federation of Teachers, Matt Meyer, and his child. Whatever our difference­s in opinions may be, no student, parent, or educator should be subjected to harassment. We are better than this,” board member Ana Vasudeo wrote.

Board member Julie Sinai also called on the community to not “vilify hardworkin­g teachers.”

“I’m dishearten­ed that group of parents followed & filmed BFT Pres & his child for the sole purpose of attacking him & pitting parents vs teachers. Parents have every right to express outrage, but don’t vilify our hardworkin­g teachers. We need to work together to reopen schools,” Sinai wrote on Twitter.

Board Vice President Ka’Dijah Brown wrote she was saddened to hear about the harassment of Meyer and his child. “I understand how frustratin­g this time has been for all of us, students, teachers and families alike. However, actions like this have the potential to cause more division. Let us continue to unite as a community to reopen our schools quickly and safely.”

School board President Ty Alper also called out the media for its republishi­ng of the video and said he was shocked a parent would follow Meyer in his personal life.

“Publicly targeting the child of someone you disagree with is frightenin­g and dangerous, and counter-productive to the collaborat­ion that needs to happen to reopen our schools and to repair the harm our students have endured,” Alper wrote.

The school district announced last month that students could return to campus as soon as March 29 for preschool, transition­al kindergart­en and kindergart­en through second grades. Grades three through eight could return April 12, while high school could return April 19, depending on the availabili­ty of teacher vaccinatio­ns.

Arreguin said in his statement he was pleased to help create a path forward for school reopenings and teacher vaccinatio­ns, “and the City/State will authorize more school reopening once we enter the Red Tier, which may happen as soon as next week if cases continue to decline.”

Guerilla Momz responded to the mayor’s comments online, saying a “one-time video of a public figure does not constitute stalking and the city attorney will tell you that. Our goal is open schools, 5 days a week. Teachers have hijacked vaccinatio­ns when they refuse to teach on campus 5 days per week — instead only offering 4 hours a week.”

In a statement Monday, Meyer noted there was a difference between a small preschool and a 10,000-student public school district in terms of size, facilities, public health guidance and services that legally have to be provided.

“We all want a safe return to school. The Berkeley Federation of Teachers is excited that Berkeley Unified will be reopening soon with a plan, supported by our members and the district, to get our students back in classrooms,” he said.

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