Seine-Port is introducing restrictions on phone use in streets, shops and parks – but young people say there’s little else to do
A picture of a smartphone with a red line through it serves as a warning in the window of a hairdresser’s shop in a French village that has voted to ban people scrolling on their phones in public. “Everyone is struggling with too much screen time,” said Ludivine, a cardiology nurse, as she had her hair cut into a bob, leaving her phone out of sight in her bag. “I voted in favour, this could be a solution.”
Seine-Port, in the Seine-et-Marne area south of Paris, with a population of fewer than 2,000 people, last weekend voted yes in a referendum to restrict smartphone use in public, banning adults and children from scrolling on their devices while walking down the street, while sitting with others on a park bench, while in shops, cafes or eating in restaurants and while parents wait for their children in front of the school gates. Those who might check their phone’s map when lost are instead being encouraged to ask for directions.
The village has also approved a charter for families on children’s use of screens: no screens of any kind in the morning, no screens in bedrooms, no screens before bed or during meals. If parents of teenagers sign a written agreement not to give their child a smartphone before the age of 15, the town hall will provide the child with an old-fashioned handset for calls only.
The difference with those examples is that they affect other people and therefore need to be enforced. Limiting screen time in the home, however, affects no one but the occupants.
This would be like a municipality mandating that all home cooked meals must be made below a certain caloric threshold because they care about public health.
Spoken like someone who’s never had someone looking down at their phone while walking plow right into them or almost run over someone who is looking down at their phone and crossing the street.
I wouldn’t ban if it I were in charge of the town, but claiming it has no effect on other people is not true.
Your breathing affects all of us.
I’ve walked into others and others have walked into me without a phone. Should we ban kids from being in public because they’re more likely to run into people? Plus the law doesn’t ban the use of phones only when walking, nor does it ban other things that one can look at while walking such as books/magazines, so that’s clearly not the reasoning behind it.
Alternatively, if smartphone bans can be justified why draw the line there and not go further? Should we restrict gay couples from making public displays of affection? Or restrict what clothes women can wear? These things can distract/upset some people, and they may not want their kids to see it either.
There’s obviously a certain balance between freedom and safety/order that we need to achieve for a functioning society, but banning phones is not on that balance.
It’s not an enforceable ordinance. The article literally says the police can’t stop or fine anyone for it.
Sorry, I misread this when I replied originally. I agree with the in the home part. That’s what I was saying initially.
I also misread the direction of the conversation, that’s on me.
The at home part is something that’s encouraged, not mandatory, with compliance being rewarded.