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Parents Lead National Push to Ban Smartphones in Schools Amid Growing Concern Over Youth Mental Health

What began as a quiet grassroots movement among concerned parents is now shaping up to be a national campaign to rid American schools of smartphones, with bipartisan legislation gaining momentum across the U.S.

At the heart of this movement is Laura Derrendinger, a former public-health nurse with Doctors Without Borders who now lives in rural Vermont with her four children. Once focused on eradicating infectious diseases like malaria and cholera, Derrendinger now channels her energy into a modern-day epidemic she says is just as dangerous: smartphones in the hands of children.

“In malaria, the mosquito is the vector,” she explains. “Here, the phone is the vector for toxic online content.”

Derrendinger is one of many parents leading a fast-growing coalition of advocacy groups—such as Smartphone Free Childhood US, Mothers Against Media Addiction, and the Vermont Coalition for Phone and Social Media Free Schools—pushing to make schools “phone-free” zones. Their solution is simple: ban phones from the school day, bell-to-bell.

Once considered an extreme proposal, support for school phone bans is surging. A July Pew Research Center poll found that 74% of U.S. adults support prohibiting phone use during class, with nearly half backing all-day bans. As of this summer, 37 states and Washington D.C. have enacted some form of restriction, with states like New York, Arkansas, and Oklahoma passing full-day bans.

The movement’s momentum is driven not only by data but by emotion. Many of the advocates, like Derrendinger, are parents who say they’ve seen firsthand the mental health toll of digital overexposure. Others, like Massachusetts mother Deb Schmill, became activists after tragedy. Schmill’s daughter Becca died in 2020 from a fentanyl overdose after being sexually assaulted and targeted online. Schmill believes social media played a key role in her daughter’s downward spiral and now lobbies for federal legislation like the Kids Online Safety Act.

While bestselling books like The Anxious Generation by Jonathan Haidt have helped give voice to these concerns, parents say their power lies in grassroots organising. Every week, members from 30 states join Zoom calls through the Distraction Free Schools Policy Project to swap strategies on lobbying legislators, drafting bills, and building community support.

Their advocacy is paying off. Derrendinger successfully persuaded Vermont state senator Terry Williams to introduce a phone ban bill after inviting him for coffee and inundating him with data. “Everybody was against it,” Williams admitted. “But the evidence was persuasive.”

As the new school year approaches, parents across the country are doubling down on efforts to get similar bills introduced in their own states. With growing political consensus and public backing, phone-free schools may soon become the norm, not the exception.

“We move fast and fix things,” Derrendinger wrote in a recent email to fellow campaigners. And judging by the pace of change, they just might.

Business

Fraudsters are increasingly using AI-generated images and videos to trick people into handing over sensitive personal and financial information, according to FraudSMART, the financial crime awareness initiative operated by the Banking and Payments Federation Ireland (BPFI). The organisation has reported a rise in online adverts promoting fake, State-backed investment schemes. These scams often use fabricated images of well-known politicians and business figures to make the offers appear legitimate and encourage users to click on registration links. Niamh Davenport, head of financial crime at BPFI, said scammers are deliberately exploiting recent media coverage of a planned State-backed savings and investment scheme to give their frauds a sense of credibility. “They often claim the scheme is open to everyone, but that places are limited and being ‘snapped up’ fast, in order to pressure people to act quickly,” she said. “They typically promise guaranteed returns or a guaranteed monthly income.” FraudSMART said that while anyone can be targeted, people in their early 50s are particularly vulnerable to investment scams. This age group is often focused on retirement planning, making them more receptive to financial offers that appear secure or high-yield. According to the organisation, most scams follow a similar pattern. Victims are first directed to click a registration link and complete a short online form providing their contact details. They are then contacted by someone posing as a financial adviser, who urges them to make an immediate “security deposit” to secure participation in the scheme. Once a payment is made, the money is quickly moved through multiple accounts, often overseas, making recovery extremely difficult. Davenport warned that scammers are becoming more sophisticated in their use of technology, particularly AI tools that allow them to create realistic but entirely fake promotional content. These materials are designed to mimic legitimate financial advertisements and build trust with potential victims. Recent figures from An Garda Síochána show investment fraud rose by 20% last year, with losses exceeding €20 million. The scale of individual scams varies widely, ranging from smaller crypto-related frauds involving a few hundred euro to large-scale investment schemes where victims lose tens of thousands. FraudSMART is urging the public to remain cautious when encountering online investment advertisements, especially those promising guaranteed returns or requiring urgent action. It also advises consumers to avoid sharing personal information with unverified sources and to be wary of pressure tactics designed to rush financial decisions. Authorities continue to warn that fraudsters are adapting quickly, using advanced digital tools to target victims across multiple platforms.

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Business

Fraudsters are increasingly using AI-generated images and videos to trick people into handing over sensitive personal and financial information, according to FraudSMART, the financial crime awareness initiative operated by the Banking and Payments Federation Ireland (BPFI). The organisation has reported a rise in online adverts promoting fake, State-backed investment schemes. These scams often use fabricated images of well-known politicians and business figures to make the offers appear legitimate and encourage users to click on registration links. Niamh Davenport, head of financial crime at BPFI, said scammers are deliberately exploiting recent media coverage of a planned State-backed savings and investment scheme to give their frauds a sense of credibility. “They often claim the scheme is open to everyone, but that places are limited and being ‘snapped up’ fast, in order to pressure people to act quickly,” she said. “They typically promise guaranteed returns or a guaranteed monthly income.” FraudSMART said that while anyone can be targeted, people in their early 50s are particularly vulnerable to investment scams. This age group is often focused on retirement planning, making them more receptive to financial offers that appear secure or high-yield. According to the organisation, most scams follow a similar pattern. Victims are first directed to click a registration link and complete a short online form providing their contact details. They are then contacted by someone posing as a financial adviser, who urges them to make an immediate “security deposit” to secure participation in the scheme. Once a payment is made, the money is quickly moved through multiple accounts, often overseas, making recovery extremely difficult. Davenport warned that scammers are becoming more sophisticated in their use of technology, particularly AI tools that allow them to create realistic but entirely fake promotional content. These materials are designed to mimic legitimate financial advertisements and build trust with potential victims. Recent figures from An Garda Síochána show investment fraud rose by 20% last year, with losses exceeding €20 million. The scale of individual scams varies widely, ranging from smaller crypto-related frauds involving a few hundred euro to large-scale investment schemes where victims lose tens of thousands. FraudSMART is urging the public to remain cautious when encountering online investment advertisements, especially those promising guaranteed returns or requiring urgent action. It also advises consumers to avoid sharing personal information with unverified sources and to be wary of pressure tactics designed to rush financial decisions. Authorities continue to warn that fraudsters are adapting quickly, using advanced digital tools to target victims across multiple platforms.

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