The Denver Post

Ballot item would limit phone sales

Measure would forbid selling mobile to a preteen.

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Colorado officials have cleared the language of a proposed ballot measure that would establish the nation’s first legal limits on buying smartphone­s for children.

Backers of the move to forbid the sale of smartphone­s to children younger than 13 now need about 300,000 voter signatures for the proposal to make the 2018 ballot.

The ban would require cellphone retailers to ask customers about the age of the primary user of a smartphone and submit monthly reports to the state Department of Revenue about adhering to the requiremen­t.

Retailers who sell a phone for use by a youngster could be fined $500, after a warning.

The campaign is being led by Denver-

area dad and doctor Tim Farnum.

“Eventually kids are going to get phones, and join the world, and I think we all know that. But little children, there’s just no good that comes from that,” he told the Coloradoan.

Farnum said he was inspired to make the push after watching his kids struggle with the psychologi­cal effects of always having a device in hand.

“They would get the phone and lock themselves in their room and change who they were,” he said.

Democratic state Sen. John Kefalas said he understand­s the reasoning behind the proposed law. But he told the Fort Collins newspaper that it would overstep the government’s role.

“Frankly, I think it should remain a family matter,” he said. “Ultimately, this comes down to parents ... making sure their kids are not putting themselves at risk.”

Last fall, the American Academy of Pediatrics released new guidelines for children’s media use, including smartphone­s.

The doctors recommende­d restrictin­g screen time to no more than an hour a day of high-quality programmin­g until age 6, after which parents should set consistent time limits and make sure electronic devices don’t take time away from sleep or physical activity.

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