We banned it.
Yes, that's what we did and are still doing. Most grade schools don't allow calculators on basic arithmetic classes. Colleges don't integrate WolframAlpha into Calculus 101 exams. etc.
Which is extremely stupid.
I want my math graduates to be skilled at using CAS systems. Yes, even in Calculus 1.
The lack of computer access for teaching math which objectively is supercharged by computation is a massive disservice to millions of individuals who could have used those CAS systems.
I don't want my engineers solving equations by hand. I especially don't want anyone who claims to be a "statistician" to not be skilled in Python (or historically, R)
The way this worked in my mathematical education is that you can't have a computer solve the equations at the level of the thing you are learning, but you can let the computer do all the stuff that's a level below what you're learning. This way, you first learn it at a fundamental level, and then with that foundation you are permitted to use computers to do that stuff as you learn something new.