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High school administrator: bell‑to‑bell cell‑phone ban mostly enforced, 451 infractions this year

Rye City School District Board of Education · April 23, 2026

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Summary

Rye High School administrator Mr. Hart reported April 21 that a bell‑to‑bell cell‑phone ban has reduced classroom phone use; the school logged 451 infractions this year with a three‑step ladder of consequences and said staff and students have adapted.

Mr. Hart, a Rye High School administrator, told the board the school implemented a bell‑to‑bell cell‑phone ban aligned with state legislation and district policy and that the enforcement model emphasizes lockers, consistent staff reporting and a progressive set of consequences.

He described the process: staff who see a phone send the student and the device to the assistant principal’s office, the office logs the incident and contacts the parent or guardian. The ladder of consequences begins with the student getting the phone back at the end of the day and parental notification; on a second infraction a parent must pick up the device; a third infraction triggers a meeting with student, parent and administrator and a tailored plan thereafter.

Mr. Hart provided the year‑to‑date enforcement numbers: 451 total cell‑phone infractions, of which 298 were first‑time infractions, 112 were second‑time, 39 were third‑time, and 9 occurred after the third infraction (involving 5 students). He said lockers were assigned to all 870 students to reduce ambiguity and that relatively few contentious confrontations have occurred. “The students are aware of it,” he said, adding that teachers appreciate not having to police phones in class.

Board members asked whether infractions have trended down; Mr. Hart said first‑time infractions decrease after the initial enforcement, and repeat infractions are a small portion of the total. Students who spoke at the meeting echoed that the change has reduced device use in class and increased social interaction during unstructured time.

Mr. Hart said the administration will continue messaging expectations, clarify edge cases (for example students retrieving phones before leaving campus or use of AirPods) and consider small policy adjustments over the summer.