Friday, May 15, 2026
ADVT 
National

As Australia bans social media for children, Quebec is paying close attention

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Nov, 2024 11:52 AM
  • As Australia bans social media for children, Quebec is paying close attention

As Australia moves to ban social media for children under 16, Quebec is debating whether to follow suit. 

The provincial government decided last spring to study the possibility of setting a minimum age for social media accounts, following a push from the youth wing of the governing Coalition Avenir Québec.

But a committee examining the issue has been hearing mixed opinions on the idea, with some experts suggesting a ban would be difficult to enforce and could do more harm than good. 

The Australian Senate passed a social media ban for children under 16 on Thursday, which is set to become a world-first law. The ban could be a model for other jurisdictions looking to combat the mental health impacts of social media use among young people. 

The law will make platforms including TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, Reddit, X and Instagram liable for fines of up to $45 million for failing to prevent children younger than 16 from holding accounts. 

“We were happy to see this measure approved by the Australian government. It gave us hope for what we proposed,” Aurélie Diep, president of the youth wing of the CAQ, said in an interview. “So for us, it is very positive news.”

Quebec Premier François Legault initially ridiculed the idea of a minimum age for social media when it was proposed by the opposition Parti Québécois in May. But he changed his tune after Diep published an open letter calling for a ban on social mediaaccounts for children younger than 16. 

Soon after, the government opted to create a special committee to study the effects of screens on young people, including the possibility of a ban

Diep, 22, said she began to use social media around the age of 14 or 15, though some of her friends encouraged her to join earlier by lying about her age. Platforms like Facebook, TikTok and Snapchat all require users to be at least 13 years old. She said young people are struggling with poor concentration and lost sleep due to time spent on their phones. 

“In the evening, before I go to bed, I say to myself, ‘one last look at Instagram and then I’m going to bed,’” she said. “And then I might spend an hour on it.”

In May, La Presse reported the results of a survey that showed 71 per cent of adult respondents in Quebec said they supported a social media ban for minors. 

The special committee has just finished a two-week tour of 18 schools. Amélie Dionne, the CAQ member of the legislature chairing the committee, said they heard from many students who support a ban, but many also said they’ve lied about their age to create social media accounts.

“There’s a certain paradox there,” she said. “The big observation we made from this tour is … that, in fact, young people want to be supervised, they want to have supervision.”

Still, the special committee has heard a range of opinions since it began holding hearings in the fall, with some experts suggesting a ban could further isolate vulnerable children. 

“I don’t think it’s desirable … for young people who are going to seek a lot of social support on social networks, in online communities,” Emmanuelle Parent, co-founder of an organization that promotes healthy online habits, told the committee in September. “I don’t think it’s going to solve the problems of cyberbullying, either.”

Sara Eve Levac, a lawyer with Option consommateurs, a non-profit focused on consumer rights, said there are privacy concerns around age verification. “There is currently no miracle solution for how to verify a child’s age to access digital platforms,” she told the committee. 

Diep said there are ways to improve age verification, such as having parents validate their children’s age when they open social media accounts. 

Dionne said the committee is going to look more closely after the holidays at how a minimum age could be enforced. The committee is expected to publish its report by the end of May 2025.

Australia’s legislation requires social media platforms to take reasonable steps to keep out users under 16 years old, but it doesn’t specify what those steps are. Platforms will have one year to work out how they can implement the ban before penalties are enforced. A government-commissioned evaluation of age-assurance technologies will report in mid-2025 on how young children could be excluded.

Quebec banned cellphones from elementary and secondary school classrooms starting in January, but they can still be used between classes. Education Minister Bernard Drainville has said the government is interested in an outright ban on cellphone use in schools.   

MORE National ARTICLES

Ties with India appear to have undergone 'a tonal shift': Canada's Trudeau

Ties with India appear to have undergone 'a tonal shift': Canada's Trudeau
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has said that Ottawa's relations with New Delhi appear to have undergone "a tonal shift", following US indictment of an Indian national in a plot to kill a Sikh separatist on American soil. The US indictment appears to have convinced the Narendra Modi government to adopt a more sober tone, Trudeau told CBC news channel in a year-end interview.  

Ties with India appear to have undergone 'a tonal shift': Canada's Trudeau

No charges in B.C. 2022 Christmas Eve bus crash that left 4 dead

No charges in B.C. 2022 Christmas Eve bus crash that left 4 dead
The prosecution service guideline says in order for charges to be approved, there must be a "substantial likelihood of conviction" based on the strength of the evidence as well as the public interest being served in a prosecution. The crash of the bus operated by Alberta-based Ebus happened on Highway 97C, the Okanagan Connector, east of Merritt, when the bus went off the road and flipped on its side

No charges in B.C. 2022 Christmas Eve bus crash that left 4 dead

1 year pilot project to provide free menstrual supplies in 15 facilities across Delta

1 year pilot project to provide free menstrual supplies in 15 facilities across Delta
The City of Delta has launched a one-year pilot project to provide free menstrual supplies in 15 facilities across the city. Pads and tampons are now available at washrooms of the city’s public facilities and they will be replenished in the same way toilet paper and paper towel are in washrooms. 

1 year pilot project to provide free menstrual supplies in 15 facilities across Delta

Truth and Reconciliation Commission calls to action won't be done until 2081: report

Truth and Reconciliation Commission calls to action won't be done until 2081: report
A new report from the Yellowhead Institute says Canada won't complete all 94 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's calls to action until 2081. The institute found that no calls to action were completed over the course of 2023. 

Truth and Reconciliation Commission calls to action won't be done until 2081: report

Pharmacare not a priority for most and East Coast outages persist

Pharmacare not a priority for most and East Coast outages persist
As Liberals and New Democrats negotiate what a future national drug plan should look like, a new survey suggests pharmacare is not at the top of the priority list for most Canadians. The survey shows that when asked to name their top two health-care priorities, only 18 per cent of those surveyed said the government should prioritize creating a new, universal, single-payer drug plan.

Pharmacare not a priority for most and East Coast outages persist

CRA has fired 185 employees for 'inappropriately' claiming COVID-19 CERB benefits

CRA has fired 185 employees for 'inappropriately' claiming COVID-19 CERB benefits
The Canada Revenue Agency says 185 employees have been fired to date for claiming a federal COVID-19 benefit when they were not eligible for it. That's an increase of 65 since the CRA last updated the public on its review in September. 

CRA has fired 185 employees for 'inappropriately' claiming COVID-19 CERB benefits