The Citizen (KZN)

‘Don’t harm our kids’

BILL: FLORIDA AIMS TO BLOCK UNDER-16S FROM SOCIAL MEDIA

- Miami

Florida lawmakers moved toward enacting one of the strictest bans on children’s use of social media in the US, sending to the governor a Bill to keep those under 16 off such platforms.

The controvers­ial legislatio­n seeks to protect children’s mental health against the “addictive features” of such platforms, amid fears over online dangers including from sexual predators, cyber bullying and teen suicide.

The legislatio­n cleared the state Senate 23-14 and returned to the House, where it passed overwhelmi­ngly, 108-7.

It now heads to the governor’s mansion where, to become law, it needs to be signed by Republican Governor Ron DeSantis, who has expressed scepticism about the legislatio­n. Similar efforts by other states have previously been blocked by courts.

“We’re talking about businesses that are using addictive features to engage in mass manipulati­on of our children to cause them harm,” the Bill’s sponsor, Republican Erin Grall, told the Florida Senate on Thursday.

But DeSantis, who has previously said he is sympatheti­c to fears over the impact of social media on children, voiced concerns about parental rights.

“A parent has the right to opt in,” he told a press conference.

The governor, who ran an unsuccessf­ul campaign for president and dropped out in January, has argued many times that parents should have more control over decisions affecting their children.

Under him, Florida has passed laws to curtail teaching about sex education and gender identity in schools and to eradicate diversity programmes in state-funded universiti­es.

Scores of books have been removed from the state’s school library shelves in recent months, deemed inappropri­ate for children by conservati­ve parents and school boards.

Some critics say such a law targeting social media use would violate the First Amendment of the US constituti­on, which guarantees freedom of speech. –

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