The 2025-26 school year is going to look different for the 2 million students and 200,000 teachers that make up New York’s K-12 classrooms. None of them, by law, will have their phones on them.
In May, Governor Kathy Hochul passed the Distraction Free Schools Initiative as part of the state’s 2026 budget, a law mandating an end to “unsanctioned use of smartphones and other internet-enabled personal devices” in schools. It asks districts to formulate personalized plans for keeping students off devices from the moment they enter campuses to the last school bell, an increasingly popular rule known as a bell-to-bell exclusion policy, one that requires just that parents have the means to communicate with their children. Those plans, aided by a $13.5 million allotment set aside for screen-free infrastructure, are due on the governor’s desk by August 1.
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There will be, understandably, a major adjustment period for students, teachers, and even parents who have battled the growing impact of phones on young people. Screen-free advocates are doing all that they can to ensure New York’s mandate — the largest of its kind across the country — will be successful. And they aren’t just a group of Luddite Boomers crying out against technology. These are young digital natives, political activists, and, under a new initiative, the teens themselves.
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