Bangor High School english teacher Emilie Throckmorton stands at the door to greet her students when enter her classroom on Jan. 28. Each student must put their phones in a metal box just inside the door. The school’s policy banning students from carrying phones during classes took effect in the fall of 2025. Credit: Linda Coan O'Kresik / BDN

Along with $300 relief checks, a millionaire tax and free community college gaining permanent status, the state budget signed by Gov. Janet Mills on Friday includes a ban on cellphones at public schools during regular school hours.

School boards will have until Aug. 1 to adopt and implement a policy “prohibiting use of personal electronic devices during the school day,” including cellphones and wearable devices, per Part GG of the supplemental budget

The Maine Department of Education and Maine School Management Association will provide a model policy with certain exceptions for students with individualized health or education plans, or documented Section 504 accommodations.

The supplemental budget includes $350,000 for the department to help districts through the transition.

As of February, 38 states and Washington, D.C., had enacted some limits to student cellphone use. Nearly half had full-day bans or comprehensive statewide restrictions, according to reporting by Stateline.

Ethan Andrews is the night editor. He was formerly the managing editor at The Free Press and worked as a reporter for The Republican Journal and Pen Bay Pilot.

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