Boston Pols Nudge BPS Toward Social Media Showdown In Court

The Boston City Council on Wednesday nudged Boston Public Schools to take a hard look at whether the district should jump into the nationwide lawsuits targeting major social media companies, arguing it could help offset costs tied to youth mental health and bulk up school-based supports. The move stops short of urging BPS to sign on, instead asking district leaders to size up the legal and financial tradeoffs first.

Two items on the council docket carried the request: a hearing order and a legislative resolution, both listed on the May 6 agenda. According to City of Boston Legistar, the measures appeared as docket items 2026-0936 and 2026-0937 and were routed into the council’s standard process.

Councilor Miniard Culpepper filed both items and framed them as one more tool to support students. “Youth mental health is one of the most pressing challenges facing our students today,” Culpepper said, with Councilor Julia Mejia signing on as co-sponsor. The council approved the resolution with votes from all 11 members present, as reported by Boston.com. BPS spokespeople did not immediately respond to requests for comment after the vote.

Why Officials Point To Courtroom Rulings

The council’s move comes amid a wave of high-profile trials and coordinated cases that supporters say have shifted the legal landscape around social media. A Los Angeles jury in March found Meta and Google liable in a bellwether trial, according to Reuters, and many similar claims have been grouped in federal multidistrict litigation. Attorneys and legal trackers note that most personal-injury and school-district claims are coordinated in MDL No. 3047 in the Northern District of California, which centralizes discovery and sets bellwether trials meant to test the strength of the cases.

What The Resolution Asks BPS To Do

The resolution does not tell BPS to automatically sign onto the national cases. Instead, it asks district officials to “conduct a thorough and timely evaluation of the costs and benefits” of joining and then present those findings to the Boston School Committee. Boston.com notes that any participation would likely be through a contingency-fee agreement, so the district would not pay upfront legal fees. The resolution also points to recent state rulings that have opened some pathways for suing tech platforms. In a related development, Massachusetts’ high court last month allowed the attorney general’s design-based claims against Meta to move forward, a backdrop proponents cited in pressing their case…

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