Beecher 200U Adopts District-Wide Cell Phone Policy, Tightens High School Discipline Steps
Beecher Community Unit School District 200-U Meeting | May 13, 2026
Article Summary: The Beecher Community Unit School District 200-U Board of Education on Wednesday, May 13, 2026, unanimously approved a new district-wide cell phone policy and updates to student handbooks across all three schools. High School Principal Mike Meyer presented a last-minute amendment that streamlined the consequence system from four steps to three.
Cell Phone Policy Key Points:
- New three-step discipline system: teacher warning, teacher confiscation with parent contact, and then escalation to the dean.
- Beecher Elementary and Beecher Junior High students may not use cell phones during the school day; phones stay in lockers.
- Beecher High School students must place phones in a classroom box during instructional time but may use them before and after school, in passing periods and at lunch.
- Limited exceptions allowed at the junior high for academic uses such as video production class and fitness class, with teacher permission and monitoring.
BEECHER — The Beecher Community Unit School District 200-U Board of Education on Wednesday, May 13, 2026, approved a new district-wide cell phone policy and a set of corresponding student handbook updates, putting in place uniform rules for student phone use at the elementary, junior high and high school for the 2026-2027 school year.
High School Principal Mike Meyer drove much of the discussion. During his staff report, Meyer told the board he wanted to amend the high school’s consequence structure before the policy moved forward, tightening four enforcement steps down to three.
“I want to keep it the same, but can I change … the consequences,” Meyer asked, before walking the board through his revisions. Under the amended approach, a teacher will still issue a verbal warning on a first violation. On a second violation, “the teacher will confiscate the phone. They will take it to the office. The student will pick it up at the end of the day,” Meyer said. The teacher will also contact a family member and email the dean. From that point on, “the dean will take care of everything after that,” Meyer said.
Meyer said the change is meant to preserve teacher authority in the classroom while keeping the system simple enough that staff will consistently follow through. “I still want teachers to own their classroom by taking it, by communicating with the families and communicating with the dean,” he said. “If I have more steps, I’m not sure that that will happen.”
Different Rules by Building
The new policy treats the three buildings differently. At Beecher Elementary School and Beecher Junior High School, phones are barred during the school day. Students keep their devices in lockers, and using them anywhere in the building during academic time is a violation.
“That’s a violation of the policy. And so that will be a punishment,” Meyer said of any attempt to retrieve and use a phone from a locker during the school day.
The junior high will continue to allow narrow academic exceptions. Junior High Principal Dr. Michelle Kwasny noted that some classes require phone use. “In production class, they need to use their phones to do BBTV,” she said, referring to the school’s student broadcast program. “In fitness class, if we’re running the mile and that helps them get through the mile, then I’m going to allow PE to use it during fitness or lifting weights or something like that.” Meyer confirmed those uses must be authorized and supervised by a teacher.
At the high school, students will store their phones in a designated classroom container during instruction. Meyer told the board he is interested in purchasing phone storage boxes specified by another administrator after seeing them recommended on Amazon. Phones are then permitted “during passing periods and lunch, so no academic time, no study hall time. So before and after school, passing periods and lunch, they’ll be able to use it,” Meyer said.
Approved Alongside Handbook Updates
The board voted unanimously to approve the Beecher 200U cell phone policy as submitted. Members then voted unanimously to approve the student handbook updates with Meyer’s amendment incorporated, after the district’s legal advisor confirmed at the meeting that the amendment could be folded into the first read.
Both items will return for a second reading and final approval at the board’s June 10, 2026, meeting, alongside the second reading of PressPlus Policy 121, which received first-reading approval the same evening.
The cell phone policy was previously discussed at the district’s policy committee meeting before reaching the full board. Most board members were present at that committee meeting, and no additional questions were raised in open session before the vote.
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