Alabama lawmakers advance proposed ban on cellphones in school

 1664208269 
1743708181

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — The Alabama House of Representatives on Thursday advanced legislation that would ban students from using cellphones in public schools.

A growing number of states are moving to ban or restrict cellphones in schools. The push has been fueled by concerns that phones are a distraction in the classroom and that screen time and social media have a negative impact on mental health.

The Alabama proposal says students could not have a wireless communication device in any K-12 public school building during the instructional day “unless the wireless communication device is turned off and stored off their person in a locker, car, or similar storage location.”

Representatives voted 79-15 for the bill. It now moves to the Alabama Senate.

Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey had used a portion of her State of the State address to urge lawmakers to pass the cellphone ban.

“Let’s get final passage and create the best learning environment for our students,” Ivey said in a statement posted on social media on Thursday.

Republican Rep. Leigh Hulsey, the sponsor of the bill, said local school boards will decide how cellphones will be stored.

Some school systems have purchased Yondr pouches that are locked during the school day. Hulsey said schools could require phones be kept in cars, lockers or simply in a designated storage rack.

Democratic Rep. Napoleon Bracy said during the debate that he is concerned the bill is “overreaching.” He said schools and teachers can already forbid students from using cellphones in a classroom.

 

At U.N., amid jeers and cheers, Netanyahu says Israel ‘must finish the job’ in Gaza

The Israeli prime minister's speech was defiant, despite his growing international isolation over his refusal to end the devastating war to eradicate Hamas.

Gulf South pharmacies make their own rules amid confusing COVID guidance: ‘It’s clear as mud’

Unclear rules and inconsistent interpretations of federal and state COVID-19 vaccination rules leave families confused and vulnerable patients unprotected.

Cellist Joshua Roman’s journey from long COVID back to the stage

Since childhood, Joshua Roman's life revolved around the cello. But when long COVID forced him to set his cello aside, he had to rethink his approach to life, faith and music.

Asheville hopes for a big fall tourist season to boost its post Helene economy

As October brings vivid mountain colors, the post Helene hospitality industry in Asheville, North Carolina hopes for a big return of tourists.

There was no rapture this week, so the quiz returns. Can you score a perfect 11?

This week, Jimmy Kimmel returned, a weird statue vanished and no one (to our knowledge) got snatched up to heaven.

Trump’s TikTok deal payment criticized as ‘shake-down scheme’ by experts

The U.S. government will collect a multibillion-dollar fee from the American investors who will take over TikTok. Some experts call the fee and other deals like it "extortion."

More 2025 Legislative Session Coverage