Popular on Rezul
- The Importance of Community Connections
- New Luxury Single Family Homes From $976,990 in Manalapan
- 15 Best Areas to Invest in Property UK in 2026 Revealed by New Investor Research
- Mike Williams Golf Center Now Open at Georgia's Lanier Islands Resort
- Turnkey Michigan City Event Venue Listed for $2.5M in Uptown Arts District
- Denver Senior Real Estate Specialist Vickie Hall Named Metro Denver Representative for Greg Luther's Instant Cash, Full Price Home Sale Program
- Appliance EMT Launches June "Summer Rescue" Promotion
- West Virginia Leaders Announce Support for Election Integrity Network's Model Election Laws Handbook
- K2 Integrity Acquires RiskFront AI to Deliver AI Automation for Financial Crime Compliance and Risk Operations
- Traian TKD Tractari Auto Iasi: cum transporti legal la RAR o masina fara numere sau cu ITP expirat
Similar on Rezul
- CCHR: DOJ Takedown Exposes Over $220 Million Defrauded in Behavioral Mental Health Fraud Schemes
- Kasinohai Audit: Most Slots Could Be Affected by Finland's Draft Gambling Rules
- Contracting Resources Group Recognized by The Daily Record as a 2026 In the Lead: Best Women-Owned Businesses Honoree
- Sexually Abused in a Psychiatric Hospital or Psychiatrist's or Psychologist's Office? CCHR Urges Survivors to Reach Out to It
- Boston Industrial Solutions Introduces High-Performance Primer for Bonding Liquid Silicone to Epoxy
- Verbica Challenges Panetta to a Televised Debate on the Issues
- George Martinez Completes Community Re-distribution Initiative, Returning $5,000 In Campaign Resources To Anchorage Nonprofits
- Psychiatric Hospitals Fail to Warn Electroshock Patients of FDA-Cited Risks in Estimated $7 Billion Industry
- George Martinez Launches Community Re-distribution Initiative With Donation to the Gamma Alpha Alpha Chapter of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity, Inc
- Inframark–Slater Joint Venture Selected to Manage Fulton County Wastewater Operations
Boston: Mayor Michelle Wu Announces Lawsuit Against Meta and Other Social Media Companies
Rezul News/10739962
Mayor Michelle Wu announced that the City of Boston, on behalf of Boston Public Schools (BPS), has filed a lawsuit against Meta and other social media companies, including TikTok, Snapchat, and YouTube, alleging that these platforms deliberately target minors with addictive design features that harm children's mental health.
"Social media companies have evidence of the harm they are causing to our kids by designing platforms that keep them hooked in endless scrolling and monetizing engagement at the expense of their mental health," said Mayor Michelle Wu. "Boston is taking legal action to protect children and youth and hold these companies accountable. Today, we are making it clear that social media companies must end exploitative practices and be accountable to standards of basic protection for children."
"Boston Public Schools provides critical mental health services for young people in our community through our counselors, social workers, psychologists, and nurses who have gone above and beyond to meet increasing student needs," said Boston Public Schools Superintendent Mary Skipper. "We work hard to set our students on the best course for success through rigorous academics and whole-student supports, and the research is clear that social media has had a negative impact on students' well-being while benefiting companies. We all need to do what is right for our students."
More on Rezul News
Over the past decade, BPS has seen a significant increase in student mental health needs directly tied to social media use. Consistent with national mental health trends, BPS children and adolescents have reported increasing mental health concerns since the proliferation of social media platforms' addictive features. For example, in 2021, 44% of BPS high school students reported persistent sadness, up from 27% in 2015. (Boston Public Health Commission, 2024).
"As an out-of-school-time provider, we see firsthand how social media addiction is reshaping childhood. We see young people who struggle to focus, to connect and to simply be present," said Alexandra Oliver-Davila, Executive Director of Sociedad Latina. "These Big Tech companies knew the harm their platforms caused and chose profit over young people's well-being. Sociedad Latina fully supports the City of Boston and The Boston Public Schools decision to hold these companies accountable, because our young people deserve better, in the classroom and beyond it."
More on Rezul News
Recognizing social media's profound impact on student well-being and learning, BPS has adopted a comprehensive, data-driven response to the student mental health crisis that integrates prevention, intervention, education, and family engagement. To meet students' needs, BPS has exponentially expanded its mental health resources in recent years. BPS now employs 240 social workers and 105 school psychologists, as opposed to 6 social workers and 48 school psychologists in 2007. BPS leads the Boston School-Based Behavioral Health Collaborative (BSBBHC), which brings together more than 25 community mental health organizations to provide direct services to BPS students.
The City's lawsuit seeks to hold social media companies accountable by forcing them to remove their addictive features and compensate the City for the mental health support our students need. These platforms designed addictive features like endless scrolling, constant notifications, and targeted algorithms specifically to keep young people hooked. And inadequate age verification has made it easy for children to access these platforms with little protection. As a result, a generation of young people have been left struggling with mental health crises, and school districts have been the front line in this crisis.
Boston's lawsuit was filed in federal court in the Northern District of California and alleges the youth mental health crisis Defendants have created constitutes a public nuisance, and that Defendants' conduct was negligent. The case will be consolidated with the complaints filed by more than 1,500 school districts across the country.
"Social media companies have evidence of the harm they are causing to our kids by designing platforms that keep them hooked in endless scrolling and monetizing engagement at the expense of their mental health," said Mayor Michelle Wu. "Boston is taking legal action to protect children and youth and hold these companies accountable. Today, we are making it clear that social media companies must end exploitative practices and be accountable to standards of basic protection for children."
"Boston Public Schools provides critical mental health services for young people in our community through our counselors, social workers, psychologists, and nurses who have gone above and beyond to meet increasing student needs," said Boston Public Schools Superintendent Mary Skipper. "We work hard to set our students on the best course for success through rigorous academics and whole-student supports, and the research is clear that social media has had a negative impact on students' well-being while benefiting companies. We all need to do what is right for our students."
More on Rezul News
- Landmark Construction Expands Glass, Glazing, and Commercial Remodeling Services Across Los Angeles County and Surrounding Areas
- Why Waiting Too Long to Downsize Can Cost Alexandria,MN Homeowners Thousands
- ENTOUCH Named Top 100 Inspiring Workplaces in North America for Third Consecutive Year
- Rebecca L. Francis Receives Pennsylvania's Most Influential Leaders Award
- Pulse Wave is where moments become movements
Over the past decade, BPS has seen a significant increase in student mental health needs directly tied to social media use. Consistent with national mental health trends, BPS children and adolescents have reported increasing mental health concerns since the proliferation of social media platforms' addictive features. For example, in 2021, 44% of BPS high school students reported persistent sadness, up from 27% in 2015. (Boston Public Health Commission, 2024).
"As an out-of-school-time provider, we see firsthand how social media addiction is reshaping childhood. We see young people who struggle to focus, to connect and to simply be present," said Alexandra Oliver-Davila, Executive Director of Sociedad Latina. "These Big Tech companies knew the harm their platforms caused and chose profit over young people's well-being. Sociedad Latina fully supports the City of Boston and The Boston Public Schools decision to hold these companies accountable, because our young people deserve better, in the classroom and beyond it."
More on Rezul News
- Michigan's Plane Crash Data Points Away from Big Airports
- 2iG Solutions Launches MGA Insight, Bringing AI-Powered Business Intelligence to Managing General Agents
- A Better Way to Find a Real Estate Agent Is Coming Soon
- Talentica Software Earns a Place Among India's Top 100 Great Mid-size Workplaces 2026
- Prepare for Hurricane Season While Increasing Their Home's Market Appeal
Recognizing social media's profound impact on student well-being and learning, BPS has adopted a comprehensive, data-driven response to the student mental health crisis that integrates prevention, intervention, education, and family engagement. To meet students' needs, BPS has exponentially expanded its mental health resources in recent years. BPS now employs 240 social workers and 105 school psychologists, as opposed to 6 social workers and 48 school psychologists in 2007. BPS leads the Boston School-Based Behavioral Health Collaborative (BSBBHC), which brings together more than 25 community mental health organizations to provide direct services to BPS students.
The City's lawsuit seeks to hold social media companies accountable by forcing them to remove their addictive features and compensate the City for the mental health support our students need. These platforms designed addictive features like endless scrolling, constant notifications, and targeted algorithms specifically to keep young people hooked. And inadequate age verification has made it easy for children to access these platforms with little protection. As a result, a generation of young people have been left struggling with mental health crises, and school districts have been the front line in this crisis.
Boston's lawsuit was filed in federal court in the Northern District of California and alleges the youth mental health crisis Defendants have created constitutes a public nuisance, and that Defendants' conduct was negligent. The case will be consolidated with the complaints filed by more than 1,500 school districts across the country.
0 Comments
Latest on Rezul News
- Foundry Atlas Launches Cash-Out Refinance Platform for Rental Property Investors
- CCHR: DOJ Takedown Exposes Over $220 Million Defrauded in Behavioral Mental Health Fraud Schemes
- Upper Florida Keys 2026 Summer Real Estate Trends
- Lady Liberty Is Coming Home: Historic WWII A-26 Invader Begins Her Final Journey to the Tulsa Air & Space Museum
- New Homes Now Selling at Grove at Mill Creek in Woodstock
- Build and Personalize Your Home from the Ground Up at The Ascent
- The Lashe Announces Limited-Time Sale on Professional Premade Fan Lash Extension Trays
- PropAccount.com Adds Prediction Markets to Its Multi-Asset Prop Firm Platform
- Rising star Hip-Hop and R&B Force Della Drops Highly Anticipated New Single, "Throw It"
- HomeInspect Launches on Independence Day to Help Independent Home Inspectors Grow Their Businesses
- UK Financial Ltd. Opens Test-Phase Maya 3 Liquidity Pool on Uniswap with DEX Screener Visibility for Market-Smoothing Ahead of CATEX Exchange Launch
- Memphis 4-Bedroom Brick Home — Path to Ownership with $10K Down
- Wagga Trucks set to expand to the Canberra Region as authorised dealer for Volvo, UD & Mack along with Freighter Group Trailers
- Global Real Estate Pro Expands Through Affiliation with Leading Developer Grupo Los Pueblos
- June Employment Report Reveals Hidden Weakness Beneath Lower Unemployment
- Kasinohai Audit: Most Slots Could Be Affected by Finland's Draft Gambling Rules
- Why More Phoenix Families Are Turning to Private Autopsy Services for Answers
- Make America French Again Launches National Campaign
- RAS AP Consulting Expands AP Governance & Automation Practice and Named Finalist for Heidelberg Materials SAP Vendor & Customer Data Project
- Lee & Associates announces sale of 24,825 SF industrial property at 2216 Pech Road in Houston