NJ’s 2026 Mandates: A Roadmap for IT Leaders

New Jersey’s educational landscape is moving fast. Between the mandatory “Bell-to-Bell” device policy and the state’s massive push for AI in the classroom, the technical requirements for student safety and oversight have fundamentally changed.

Most districts are getting blindsided by the fallout of these new rules. The real headache for IT departments is managing the network and security shifts that happen when students lose their personal phones but still have 1-to-1 district-issued Chromebooks in their hands.

Here is the breakdown of the three major legislative shifts you need to navigate before the July 1st implementation deadlines.

1. The “Bell-to-Bell” Law (P.L. 2025, c. 195)

Governor Murphy signed this in January, and it’s a full mandate for the 2026-27 school year. It effectively pulls personal phones out of classrooms, lunchrooms, and even recess.

  • The IT Catch: Instead of just stopping their scrolling habits when phones are put away, students usually just shift that same energy over to their district Chromebooks or iPads.
  • The Guidance: To manage this, the NJDOE specifically recommends that schools utilize device management software to monitor browsing on school-issued devices. This ensures that “phone-free” doesn’t just result in a 13-inch distraction for your network.

2. The NJSBA Model AI Policy & S2862

With New Jersey’s “AI Moonshot” in full swing, legislation now requires districts to incorporate AI literacy into the K-12 curriculum.

  • The Strategy: Most NJ boards are adopting the NJSBA “AI Traffic Light” model. It’s a solid framework, but it is only as strong as your network visibility.
  • The Oversight Gap: You can’t safely support a “Yellow Light” (conditional use) policy if you have no way to audit what students are actually prompting or which unauthorized LLMs are bypassing your filters.

3. The 10-School-Day HIB Investigation (ABRA)

New Jersey still has the toughest anti-bullying laws in the country. Under the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights Act (ABRA), the timeline for investigations is incredibly tight.

  • The Timeline: Reports must be made verbally the same day, and the investigation must be completed within 10 school days.
  • The IT Bottleneck: The biggest drain on IT resources is often the manual “evidence hunt.” Most investigators lose days waiting for IT to pull logs for the mandatory HIB 338 Form. Automating the discovery of this digital evidence is the only way to hit these deadlines without derailing your team’s weekly projects.

Is your district’s tech stack ready for July 1st?

As you finalize your 2026-27 roadmap, don’t let siloed tools create more manual work for your staff. Securly’s safetyOS™ was built to handle NJ’s specific HIB, AI, and device mandates in one unified platform. We help you stay compliant while reducing the administrative burden on your IT department.

Book a 15-minute demo with our team to see how we automate compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does the “Bell-to-Bell” law apply to school buses?

Yes. Under P.L. 2025, c. 195, the mandate applies during regular school hours, on school buses, and at school-sanctioned events. Districts must ensure compliance across all supervised settings, not just inside classroom walls.

When is the next major funding deadline?

The FY 2026 SVPP (School Violence Prevention Program) and related state grants typically close their application window around April 15, 2026. Districts planning to apply should begin gathering documentation and vendor alignment well in advance of the deadline.

How do we prove “Responsible Use” for AI?

According to New Jersey School Boards Association standards, districts must maintain a clear audit trail of AI usage and interactions. This includes documentation of prompts, usage patterns, and oversight processes. Securly provides the transparency needed to monitor AI activity without resorting to blanket bans that limit instructional innovation.

What counts as “Device Management Software” in the NJDOE guidance?

The New Jersey Department of Education guidance refers to tools that can proactively monitor and restrict browsing activity on school-issued devices or any device connecting to district Wi-Fi. The goal is to ensure academic focus, enforce policy compliance, and reduce misuse.

Can we use state security grants for Securly?

Yes. New Jersey funding priorities are increasingly aligned with “Connected Safety” platforms that integrate HIB prevention, AI oversight, and real-time safety alerts. Solutions that unify monitoring, reporting, and compliance under a single system are well positioned for state security grant funding.

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